Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2763
STATE OF MINNESOTA
EIGHTY-SIXTH SESSION - 2009
_____________________
THIRTY-SIXTH DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Monday, April 20, 2009
The House of Representatives convened at
1:00 p.m. and was called to order by Margaret Anderson Kelliher, Speaker of the
House.
Prayer was offered by the Reverend Harvey
Nelson, Zion Lutheran Church, Litchfield, Minnesota.
The members of the House gave the pledge
of allegiance to the flag of the United States of America.
The roll was called and the following
members were present:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Atkins
Beard
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brod
Brown
Brynaert
Buesgens
Bunn
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Cornish
Davids
Davnie
Dean
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Dittrich
Doepke
Doty
Downey
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Eken
Emmer
Falk
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Greiling
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jackson
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Kath
Kelly
Kiffmeyer
Knuth
Koenen
Kohls
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Loon
Mack
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murdock
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Newton
Nornes
Norton
Obermueller
Olin
Otremba
Paymar
Pelowski
Peppin
Persell
Peterson
Poppe
Reinert
Rosenthal
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Sanders
Scalze
Scott
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Shimanski
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Sterner
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Torkelson
Urdahl
Wagenius
Ward
Welti
Westrom
Winkler
Zellers
Spk. Kelliher
A quorum was present.
The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the
Journal of the preceding day. Magnus moved
that further reading of the Journal be dispensed with and that the Journal be
approved as corrected by the Chief Clerk.
The motion prevailed.
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top
of Page 2764
REPORTS OF CHIEF CLERK
S. F. No. 245
and H. F. No. 286, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk
for comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain
exceptions.
SUSPENSION OF RULES
Clark moved that
the rules be so far suspended that S. F. No. 245 be substituted
for H. F. No. 286 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 298
and H. F. No. 854, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk
for comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain
exceptions.
SUSPENSION OF RULES
Lesch moved that
the rules be so far suspended that S. F. No. 298 be substituted
for H. F. No. 854 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 567
and H. F. No. 648, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk
for comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain
exceptions.
SUSPENSION OF RULES
Mariani moved that
the rules be so far suspended that S. F. No. 567 be substituted
for H. F. No. 648 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 971
and H. F. No. 1198, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk
for comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain
exceptions.
SUSPENSION OF RULES
Davnie moved that
the rules be so far suspended that S. F. No. 971 be substituted
for H. F. No. 1198 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1220
and H. F. No. 1338, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk
for comparison, were examined and found to be identical.
Norton moved that
S. F. No. 1220 be substituted for H. F. No. 1338
and that the House File be indefinitely postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1467
and H. F. No. 1421, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk
for comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain
exceptions.
SUSPENSION OF RULES
Scott moved that
the rules be so far suspended that S. F. No. 1467 be substituted
for H. F. No. 1421 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
Journal of the House - 36th
Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2765
PETITIONS AND COMMUNICATIONS
The following communication was received:
STATE
OF MINNESOTA
OFFICE
OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE
ST.
PAUL 55155
The Honorable Margaret
Anderson Kelliher
Speaker of the House of
Representatives
The Honorable James P. Metzen
President of the Senate
I have the honor to inform you that the
following enrolled Acts of the 2009 Session of the State Legislature have been
received from the Office of the Governor and are deposited in the Office of the
Secretary of State for preservation, pursuant to the State Constitution,
Article IV, Section 23:
S. F. No. |
H. F. No. |
Session Laws Chapter No. |
Time and Date Approved 2009 |
Date Filed 2009 |
743 17 2:12
p.m. April 16 April
16
451 18 2:13
p.m. April 16 April 16
896 19 2:15
p.m. April 16 April 16
811 20 2:16
p.m. April 16 April 16
757 21 2:18
p.m. April 16 April 16
265 22 2:19
p.m. April 16 April 16
335 23 2:20
p.m. April 16 April 16
Sincerely,
Mark
Ritchie
Secretary
of State
REPORTS OF STANDING
COMMITTEES AND DIVISIONS
Lenczewski from the Committee on Taxes to
which was referred:
H. F. No. 2, A bill for an act relating to
education; providing for policy and funding for family, adult, and
prekindergarten through grade 12 education including general education,
education excellence, special programs, facilities and technology, libraries,
nutrition, accounting, self-sufficiency and lifelong learning, state agencies,
pupil transportation, school finance system changes, forecast adjustments, and
technical corrections; providing for advisory groups; requiring reports;
appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 6.74; 16A.06,
subdivision 11; 120A.40; 120B.02; 120B.021, subdivision 1; 120B.022,
subdivision 1; 120B.023, subdivision 2; 120B.11, subdivision 5; 120B.13;
120B.132; 120B.30; 120B.31; 120B.35; 120B.36; 121A.15, subdivision 8; 121A.41,
subdivisions 7, 10; 121A.43; 122A.07, subdivisions 2, 3; 122A.18, subdivision
4; 122A.31, subdivision 4;
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2766
122A.40, subdivisions 6, 8; 122A.41,
subdivisions 3, 5; 122A.413, subdivision 2; 122A.414, subdivisions 2, 2b;
122A.60, subdivisions 1a, 2; 122A.61, subdivision 1; 123A.05; 123A.06; 123A.08;
123B.02, subdivision 21; 123B.03, subdivisions 1, 1a; 123B.10, subdivision 1;
123B.14, subdivision 7; 123B.143, subdivision 1; 123B.51, by adding a
subdivision; 123B.53, subdivision 5; 123B.57, subdivision 1; 123B.59,
subdivisions 2, 3, 3a; 123B.70, subdivision 1; 123B.71, subdivisions 8, 9, 12;
123B.75, subdivision 5; 123B.76, subdivision 3; 123B.77, subdivision 3;
123B.79, subdivision 7; 123B.81, subdivisions 3, 4, 5; 123B.83, subdivision 3;
123B.92, subdivisions 1, 5; 124D.095, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 7, 10; 124D.10;
124D.11, subdivisions 4, 9; 124D.111, subdivision 3; 124D.128, subdivisions 2,
3; 124D.42, subdivision 6, by adding a subdivision; 124D.4531; 124D.59,
subdivision 2; 124D.65, subdivision 5; 124D.68, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5;
124D.83, subdivision 4; 124D.86, subdivisions 1, 1a, 1b; 125A.02; 125A.07;
125A.08; 125A.091; 125A.11, subdivision 1; 125A.15; 125A.28; 125A.51; 125A.56;
125A.57, subdivision 2; 125A.62, subdivision 8; 125A.63, subdivisions 2, 4;
125A.76, subdivisions 1, 5; 125A.79, subdivision 7; 125B.26; 126C.01, by adding
subdivisions; 126C.05, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 15, 16, 17, 20; 126C.10,
subdivisions 1, 2, 2a, 3, 4, 6, 13, 14, 18, 24, 34, by adding subdivisions;
126C.13, subdivisions 4, 5; 126C.15, subdivisions 2, 4; 126C.17, subdivisions
1, 5, 6, 9; 126C.20; 126C.40, subdivisions 1, 6; 126C.41, subdivision 2;
126C.44; 127A.08, by adding a subdivision; 127A.441; 127A.45, subdivisions 2,
3, 13, by adding a subdivision; 127A.47, subdivisions 5, 7; 127A.51; 134.31,
subdivision 4a, by adding a subdivision; 169.011, subdivision 71; 169.443,
subdivision 9; 169.4501, subdivision 1; 169.4503, subdivision 20, by adding a
subdivision; 169.454, subdivision 13; 169A.03, subdivision 23; 171.01,
subdivision 22; 171.02, subdivisions 2, 2a, 2b; 171.05, subdivision 2; 171.17,
subdivision 1; 171.22, subdivision 1; 171.321, subdivisions 1, 4, 5; 181A.05,
subdivision 1; 275.065, subdivisions 3, 6; 299A.297; 471.975; 475.58,
subdivision 1; Laws 2007, chapter 146, article 1, section 24, subdivisions 2,
as amended, 6, as amended, 8, as amended; article 2, section 46, subdivision 6,
as amended; article 3, section 24, subdivision 4, as amended; article 4,
section 16, subdivisions 2, as amended, 6, as amended; article 5, section 13,
subdivisions 2, as amended, 3, as amended; article 9, section 17, subdivisions
2, as amended, 13, as amended; Laws 2008, chapter 363, article 2, section 46,
subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters
120B; 123B; 125A; 126C; 127A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 120B.362;
120B.39; 121A.27; 121A.66; 121A.67, subdivision 1; 122A.628; 122A.75; 123B.54;
123B.57, subdivisions 3, 4, 5; 123B.591; 124D.091; 125A.03; 125A.05; 125A.18;
125A.76, subdivision 4; 125A.79, subdivision 6; 126C.10, subdivisions 2b, 13a,
13b, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 31a, 31b, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36; 126C.12;
126C.126; 127A.50; 275.065, subdivisions 5a, 6b, 6c, 8, 9, 10; Minnesota Rules,
parts 3525.0210, subparts 5, 6, 9, 13, 17, 29, 30, 34, 43, 46, 47; 3525.0400;
3525.1100, subpart 2, item F; 3525.2445; 3525.2900, subpart 5; 3525.4220.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page 46,
after line 24, insert:
"Sec.
14. [120B.3625]
QUALITY ACHIEVEMENT IN MINNESOTA SCHOOLS.
(a) To improve
K-12 educational achievements in Minnesota, schools and school districts are
encouraged to participate in the Minnesota Council for Quality's organizational
assessment and performance improvement process and learn how to enhance
organizational structures and processes, eliminate barriers to students'
improved educational performance, and increase teaching effectiveness and
administrative efficiency. Schools and
school districts that achieve improved performance are encouraged to
disseminate information and provide guidance to interested educators about how
they achieved that improvement.
(b) The
commissioner may recognize schools and school districts that participate in the
Minnesota Council for Quality's organizational assessment and performance improvement
process, receive Minnesota Council for Quality recognition at the
"commitment" level or higher, and implement action plans to continue
improvements in student learning and school performance, consistent with this
chapter.
EFFECTIVE DATE.
This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2767
Page 209, line 11, delete "district's"
and insert "district demonstrates low" and delete "in"
Page 209, line 12, delete "academic
performance" and insert "and needs to improve students'
current achievement and educational growth" and after "system"
insert "under section 120B.35" and delete "is below
the"
Page 209, line 13, delete "established
progress levels,"
Page 209, line 21, delete "and"
and insert a comma
Page 209, line 22, after "practices"
insert ", and processes" and after "outcomes"
insert ", which may include, among other initiatives, an organizational
assessment and performance improvement process under section 120B.3625"
Renumber the sections in sequence
Correct the title numbers accordingly
With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Carlson from the Committee
on Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 869, A bill for
an act relating to higher education; providing for state membership in the
Midwest Higher Education Compact; appropriating money.
Reported the same back with
the following amendments:
Delete everything after the
enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
HIGHER EDUCATION APPROPRIATIONS
Section
1. SUMMARY
OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Subdivision 1. Summary by fund. The amounts shown in this section
summarize direct appropriations, by fund, made in this article.
2010 2011 Total
General $1,388,543,000 $1,383,285,000 $2,771,828,000
Health Care Access 2,157,000 2,157,000 4,314,000
Federal
Stabilization 180,920,000 180,920,000 361,840,000
Total $1,571,620,000 $1,566,362,000 $3,137,982,000
Journal of
the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2768
Subd. 2.
Summary by agency - all funds. The amounts shown in this subdivision
summarize direct appropriations, by agency, made in this article.
2010 2011 Total
Minnesota Office of Higher Education $195,358,000 $190,049,000 $385,407,000
Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State
Colleges and
Universities 665,883,000 665,883,000 1,331,766,000
Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota 709,079,000 709,079,000 1,418,158,000
Mayo Medical Foundation 1,300,000 1,351,000 2,651,000
Total $1,571,620,000 $1,566,362,000 $3,137,982,000
Sec. 2. HIGHER EDUCATION APPROPRIATIONS.
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and for the
purposes specified in this article. The
appropriations are from the general fund, or another named fund, and are
available for the fiscal years indicated for each purpose. The figures "2010" and
"2011" used in this article mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2010, or June 30, 2011,
respectively. "The first year" is fiscal year 2010. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2011. "The biennium" is fiscal years 2010
and 2011.
APPROPRIATIONS
Available for the Year
Ending June 30
2010 2011
Sec. 3. MINNESOTA
OFFICE OF HIGHER EDUCATION
Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation $195,358,000 $190,049,000
The amounts that may be spent for
each purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd.
2. State Grants 149,721,000 144,618,000
If the appropriation in this
subdivision for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other
year is available for it.
The legislature intends that the
Office of Higher Education make full grant awards in each year of the biennium.
For the biennium, the tuition maximum
for students in four-year programs is $9,938 in each year.
This appropriation sets the living
and miscellaneous expense allowance at $6,900 each year.
Journal of the
House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2769
Subd.
3. Safety Officers' Survivors 100,000 100,000
This appropriation is to provide
educational benefits under Minnesota Statutes, section 299A.45, to dependent children
under age 23 and to the spouses of public safety officers killed in the line of
duty.
If the appropriation in this
subdivision for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other
year is available for it.
Subd.
4. Interstate Tuition Reciprocity 2,750,000 2,750,000
If the appropriation in this
subdivision for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other
year is available to meet reciprocity contract obligations.
Subd.
5. State Work Study 15,500,000 15,500,000
Subd.
6. Child Care Grants 6,675,000 6,675,000
Subd.
7. Indian Scholarships 2,375,000 2,375,000
The director of the Minnesota Office
of Higher Education must contract with at least one knowledgeable person
residing in or near the city of Bemidji to assist students with the
scholarships under Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.126, and with other
information about financial aid for which the students may be eligible. Bemidji State University must provide office
space at no cost to the Minnesota Office of Higher Education for purposes of
administering the American Indian scholarship program under Minnesota Statutes,
section 136A.126.
Subd.
8. Minitex 5,631,000 5,631,000
Subd.
9. MnLINK Gateway 400,000 400,000
Subd.
10. Learning Network of Minnesota 4,800,000 4,800,000
Subd.
11. Minnesota College Savings Plan 700,000 700,000
Subd.
12. Midwest Higher Education Compact 95,000 95,000
Subd.
13. Other Small Programs 853,000 853,000
This appropriation includes funding
for student and parent information, information for college attendance, and
minority education programs.
Subd.
14. TEACH Program 300,000 300,000
For the teacher education and
compensation helps (TEACH) and the Minnesota early childhood teacher retention
programs in Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.126. This is a onetime appropriation.
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2770
Subd. 15. Power
of You 2,000,000 2,000,000
For transfer to MnSCU for the existing Power of You
program and for pilot sites under article 2, section 30.
Subd.
16. Technical and Community College Emergency Grants 100,000 100,000
For transfer to the financial aid offices at each of
the colleges of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities to provide
emergency aid grants to technical and community college students who are
experiencing extraordinary economic circumstances that may result in the
students dropping out of school without completing the term or their program.
Subd. 17. Veterinary
Loan Forgiveness 225,000
For the large animal loan forgiveness program under
Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.1795.
This appropriation is available until expended.
Subd. 18. Agency
Administration 2,685,000 2,685,000
Subd. 19. Balances
Forward
A balance in the first year under this section does
not cancel, but is available for the second year.
Subd. 20. Transfers
The Minnesota Office of Higher Education may transfer
unencumbered balances from the appropriations in subdivisions 2 to 7 and 11 to
the state grant appropriation, the safety officer survivors appropriation, the
interstate tuition reciprocity appropriation, the Minnesota college savings
plan appropriation, the child care appropriation, and the state work study
appropriation.
Subd. 21. United
Family Medicine Residency Program 448,000 467,000
For a grant to the united family medicine residency
program. This appropriation must be used
to support up to 18 resident physicians each year in family practice at united
family medicine residency programs and must prepare doctors to practice family
care medicine in underserved rural and urban areas of the state. At least seven of the resident physicians
must be at a publicly owned rural hospital that has an attached nursing home. The legislature intends for this program to
improve health care in underserved communities, provide affordable access to
appropriate medical care, and manage the treatment of patients in a more
cost-effective manner.
Journal of the
House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2771
Subd.
22. TANF Work-Study
Notwithstanding any rule to the
contrary, work-study jobs funded by a TANF appropriation do not require
employer matching funds.
Subd.
23. Reporting
By November 1 and February 15, the
Minnesota Office of Higher Education must provide updated state grant spending
projections, taking into account the most current and projected enrollment and
tuition and fee information, economic conditions, and other relevant
factors. Before submitting state grant
spending projections, the office must meet and consult with representatives of
public and private postsecondary education, the Department of Finance, the
governor's office, legislative staff, and financial aid administrators.
Subd.
24. Accreditation
The office must work with small
institutions to identify cost-effective methods to achieve accreditation
necessary to be an eligible institution for state and federal financial aid.
Sec.
4. BOARD
OF TRUSTEES OF THE MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation $665,883,000 $665,883,000
The amounts that may be spent for
each purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd.
2. Central Office and Shared Services Unit 47,328,000 47,328,000
For the Office of the Chancellor and
the Shared Services Division.
For fiscal years 2012 and 2013 the
base for the Central Office and Shared Services Unit is $44,823,000 each year.
Subd.
3. Operations and Maintenance 553,366,000 553,366,000
(a) It is the intention of the
legislature to increase the amount of funding distributed to colleges and
universities through the allocation model to provide direct support of
instruction and related functions necessary to protect the core mission of
educating students.
(b) Allocations to campuses from
appropriations under this section must not be reduced below the allocations for
the biennium ending June 30, 2009, after deducting any amount unallotted in the
biennium.
Journal of
the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2772
(c) The Board of Trustees shall
submit expenditure reduction plans by March 15, 2010, to the committees of the
legislature with responsibility for higher education finance to achieve the
2012-2013 base established in this section at the central office and at each
institution. The plan submitted by the
board must be based on plans developed at each institution detailing reductions
to achieve lower base allocations at that institution. Each plan must focus on protecting direct
instruction while reducing peripheral programs and services that may benefit
students and institutions but are not necessary to the education of students
seeking certificates, diplomas, and degrees.
(d) During the biennium ending June
30, 2011, except for positions that are essential to the daily operation of an
institution, the board must not fill administrative and managerial vacancies,
existing on the effective date of this section, in the central office or at any
of the campuses of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities or use a
search firm for any hiring. The board
must not authorize any increase in salaries for administrative and managerial
positions in the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities in the biennium
ending June 30, 2011. The board must not
charge any of the institutions for reductions under this section to the central
office.
(e) For the biennium ending June 30,
2011, the board must not reserve or expend appropriations under this
subdivision for competitive salaries, awards of excellence, campus and
technology initiatives outside the allocation model, or other board or
chancellor initiatives. All amounts
saved under this paragraph must be added to the allocation model and distributed
to the institutions.
(f) For the biennium ending June 30,
2011, expenditures under this subdivision must not exceed $40,000,000 for
technology initiatives, including technology infrastructure improvements, and
$5,000,000 for initiatives to recruit and retain traditionally underrepresented
students. All amounts saved under this
paragraph must be added to the allocation model and distributed to the
institutions.
(g) $40,000 each year is for the Cook
County Higher Education Board to provide educational programs and academic
support services.
(h) $1,000,000 each year is for the
Northeast Minnesota Higher Education District and high schools in its
area. Students from area high schools
may also access the facilities and faculty of the Northeast Minnesota Higher
Education District for state-of-the-art technical education opportunities,
including MnSCU's 2+2 Pathways initiative.
Journal of
the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2773
(i) $225,000 each year is to enhance
eFolio Minnesota and for a center to provide on-site and Internet-based support
and technical assistance to users of the state's eFolio Minnesota system to
promote workforce and economic development and to enable access to workforce
information generated through the eFolio Minnesota system.
(j) For fiscal years 2012 and 2013 the
base for operations and maintenance is $609,631,000 each year.
Subd.
4. Federal Stimulus Appropriation 65,189,000 65,189,000
(a) This appropriation is from the fiscal
stabilization account in the federal fund and may be used for modernization,
renovation, or repair of facilities that are primarily used for instruction,
research, or student housing but may not be used for maintenance of systems,
equipment, or facilities. Amounts in
this subdivision must not be allocated to modernization, renovation, or repair
of stadiums or other facilities primarily used for athletic contests or
exhibitions or other events for which admission is charged to the general
public and must not be allocated to any facility used for sectarian instruction
or religious worship or in which a substantial portion of the functions of the
facilities are subsumed in a religious mission.
No amount from this appropriation may be allocated to increase endowment
funds.
(b) Appropriations under this
subdivision must be used as a bridge for budget reductions in the biennium
ending June 30, 2013, and may be used to retain faculty and staff jobs, to
provide severance and for early retirement incentives, and to mitigate the
rising costs of attendance through minimizing tuition increases and the support
of student employment opportunities.
(c) The legislature intends that the
tuition increase for a Minnesota resident undergraduate student in the
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, must not exceed five percent per
year for the biennium ending June 30, 2011.
Federal stimulus money under this subdivision must be used to buy down
the tuition increase to no more than two percent per year for these students.
(d) An additional $3,469,000 is
appropriated in fiscal year 2009 from the fiscal stabilization account in the
federal fund.
Subd. 5. System
Improvements
To increase efficiencies and equity
for faculty and staff, the Board of Trustees is encouraged to place a priority
on identifying and implementing measures to improve the human resources system
used by the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities. One of the goals of improving the human
resources system is to provide seamless information on faculty and employees to
facilitate transfers between institutions.
Journal of the
House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2774
Sec.
5. BOARD
OF REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation $709,079,000 $709,079,000
The amounts that may be spent for
each purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd.
2. Operations and Maintenance 517,623,000 517,623,000
(a) In the biennium ending June 30,
2011, the board must not use appropriations under this section to create or
fund new administrative positions at the University of Minnesota or to increase
salaries for administrative positions.
(b) Appropriations under this
subdivision may be used for a new scholarship under Minnesota Statutes, section
137.0225, to complement the University's Founders scholarship.
(c) This appropriation includes
amounts for an Ojibwe Indian language program on the Duluth campus.
(d) This appropriation includes money
for the Dakota language teacher training immersion program on the Twin Cities
campus to prepare teachers to teach in Dakota language immersion programs.
(e) This appropriation includes
$600,000 each year for the Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory.
(f) For fiscal years 2012 and 2013,
the base for operations and maintenance is $598,124,000 each year.
Subd.
3. Health Care Access Fund 2,157,000 2,157,000
This appropriation is from the health
care access fund and is for primary care education initiatives.
Subd.
4. Special Appropriation 73,468,000 73,468,000
(a) Agriculture
and Extension Service 52,255,000 52,255,000
(1) This appropriation is for
agricultural research and extension activities as provided in this paragraph.
(2) The Agricultural Experiment
Stations and Minnesota Extension Service must convene agricultural advisory
groups to focus research, education, and extension activities on producer needs
and implement an outreach strategy that more effectively and rapidly transfers
research results and best practices to producers throughout the state.
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(3) This appropriation includes
funding for research efforts that demonstrate a renewed emphasis on the needs
of the state's production agriculture community. The following areas should be prioritized and
carried out in consultation with Minnesota producer organizations:
(i) vegetable crop research;
(ii) fertilizer and soil fertility
research and development;
(iii) soil, groundwater, and surface
water conservation practices and contaminant reduction research;
(iv) discovering and developing plant
varieties that use nutrients more efficiently;
(v) breeding and development of turf
seed and other biomass resources in all three Minnesota biomes;
(vi) development of new disease-resistant
and pest-resistant varieties of turf and agronomic crops;
(vii) utilizing plant and livestock
cells to treat and cure human diseases;
(viii) the development of dairy
coproducts;
(ix) a rapid agricultural response
fund for current or emerging animal, plant, and insect problems affecting
production or food safety;
(x) crop pest and animal disease
research;
(xi) developing animal agriculture
that is capable of sustainably feeding the world;
(xii) consumer food safety education
and outreach; and
(xiii) programs to meet the research
and outreach needs of sustainable and organic livestock and crop farmers.
(4) This appropriation includes
funding for research and outreach on the production of renewable energy from
Minnesota biomass resources. The
following areas should be prioritized and carried out in consultation with
Minnesota producer and bioenergy organizations:
(i) biofuel and other energy
production from perennial crops, small grains, row crops, and forestry products
in conjunction with the Natural Resources Research Institute (NRRI);
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2009 - Top of Page 2776
(ii) alternative bioenergy crops and cropping systems;
and
(iii) biofuel coproducts used for livestock feed.
(5) This appropriation includes funding for analysis
of livestock facility siting and regulatory models from other states and
countries and the following aspects of ethanol production in Minnesota:
(i) water use trends as compared to other industries
and activities;
(ii) the carbon balance of ethanol production;
(iii) the effect of ethanol blending requirements on
transportation fuel prices; and
(iv) the economic impacts of ethanol production and
use including such measures as employment, economic output, and state and local
tax revenues.
(6) This appropriation may be used to establish and
maintain a statewide organic research and education initiative, secure a
facility and retain current faculty levels for poultry research currently
conducted at UMore Park, develop and implement a dairy producer continuing
education program and for scoping a new dairy research and teaching facility.
(7) By February 1, 2011, the Board of Regents must
submit a report to the legislative committees with responsibility for
agriculture and higher education finance on the status and outcomes of research
and initiatives funded in this section.
(b) Health
Sciences 5,275,000 5,275,000
$346,000 each year is to support up to 12 resident
physicians each year in the St. Cloud Hospital family practice residency
program. The program must prepare
doctors to practice primary care medicine in the rural areas of the state. The legislature intends for this program to
improve health care in rural communities, provide affordable access to
appropriate medical care, and manage the treatment of patients in a more
cost-effective manner.
The remainder of this appropriation is for the rural
physicians associates program, the Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, health
sciences research, dental care, and the Biomedical Engineering Center.
(c) Institute
of Technology 1,387,000 1,387,000
For the Geological Survey and the talented youth
mathematics program.
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(d) System
Specials 6,551,000 6,551,000
For general research, student loans matching money,
industrial relations education, Natural Resources Research Institute, Center
for Urban and Regional Affairs, and the Bell Museum of Natural History.
(e) University
of Minnesota and Mayo Foundation Partnership 8,000,000 8,000,000
For the direct and indirect expenses of the
collaborative research partnership between the University of Minnesota and the
Mayo Foundation for research in biotechnology and medical genomics. This appropriation is available until
expended. All parties to the partnership
and chairs of the senate and house of representatives committees responsible
for higher education finance must be consulted before the Board of Regents
reduces the amount allocated to the partnership under this paragraph during the
biennium ending June 30, 2011. An annual
report on the expenditure of these funds must be submitted to the governor and
the chairs of the senate and house of representatives committees responsible
for higher education and economic development by June 30 of each fiscal year.
Subd. 5. Federal
Stimulus Appropriation 115,731,000 115,731,000
(a) This appropriation is from the fiscal
stabilization account in the federal fund and may be used for modernization,
renovation, or repair of facilities that are primarily used for instruction,
research, or student housing but may not be used for maintenance of systems,
equipment, or facilities. Amounts in
this subdivision must not be allocated to modernization, renovation, or repair of
stadiums or other facilities primarily used for athletic contests or
exhibitions or other events for which admission is charged to the general
public and must not be allocated to any facility used for sectarian instruction
or religious worship or in which a substantial portion of the functions of the
facilities are subsumed in a religious mission.
No amount from this appropriation may be allocated to increase endowment
funds.
(b) Appropriations under this subdivision must be used
as a bridge for budget reductions in the biennium ending June 30, 2013, and may
be used to retain faculty and staff jobs, to provide severance and for early
retirement incentives and to mitigate rising costs of attendance through
minimizing tuition increases and support of student employment opportunities.
(c) The legislature intends that the net tuition
increase for a Minnesota resident undergraduate student at the University of
Minnesota must not exceed $300 per year for the biennium ending June 30,
2011. Appropriations of federal stimulus
money under this subdivision must be used to accomplish this goal.
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(d) $400,000 of this appropriation in
fiscal year 2010 is for a grant to the Minnesota Wildlife Rehabilitation Center
for their uncompensated expenses. This
is a onetime appropriation.
(e) An additional $27,080,000 is
appropriated in fiscal year 2009 from the stabilization account in the federal
fund.
Subd.
6. Academic Health Center
The appropriation for Academic Health
Center funding under Minnesota Statutes, section 297F.10, is $22,250,000 each
year.
Subd.
7. NRRI Research
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
section 137.022, subdivision 4, the board may use up to $150,000 of the income
credited to the permanent university fund from royalties from mining under
state mineral leases to fund research at the Coleraine Minerals Research
Laboratory of the Natural Resources Research Institute by taconite engineers
who have been laid off by the mining industry.
Subd.
8. Enrollment Increases
Over the biennium ending June 30,
2011, the Board of Regents must increase the enrollment of Minnesota resident
freshmen with the goal of reaching at least the proportion of Minnesota
resident undergraduates enrolled in the University of Minnesota in the
2006-2007 academic year.
Sec.
6. MAYO
CLINIC
Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation $1,300,000 $1,351,000
The amounts that may be spent for
each purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd.
2. Medical School 640,000 665,000
The state must pay a capitation each
year for each student who is a resident of Minnesota. The appropriation may be transferred between
years of the biennium to accommodate enrollment fluctuations.
It is intended that during the
biennium the Mayo Clinic use the capitation money to increase the number of
doctors practicing in rural Minnesota areas in need of doctors.
Subd.
3. Family Practice and Graduate Residency Program 660,000 686,000
The state must pay stipend support
for up to 27 residents each year.
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ARTICLE 2
RELATED HIGHER EDUCATION
Section 1.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 135A.08, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. Course equivalency. The Board of Regents of the University
of Minnesota and the Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State Colleges
and Universities shall develop and maintain course equivalency guides for use
between institutions that have a high frequency of transfer. The course equivalency guides must include
information on the course equivalency and awarding of credit for learning
acquired as a result of the successful completion of formal military courses
and occupational training. Course
equivalency guides shall are not be required for
vocational technical programs that have not been divided into identifiable
courses. The governing boards of private
institutions that grant associate and baccalaureate degrees and that have a
high frequency of transfer students are requested to participate in developing
these guides.
Sec. 2.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 135A.25, subdivision 4, is amended to
read:
Subd. 4. Minnesota Office of Higher Education
responsibilities. (a) For
private postsecondary institutions, the Minnesota Office of Higher Education
must develop educational materials considering the recommendations by the
Minnesota Office of Higher Education and others and at least annually convene
and sponsor meetings and workshops and provide educational strategies for faculty,
students, administrators, institutions, and bookstores to inform all interested
parties on strategies for reducing the costs of course materials for students
attending postsecondary institutions.
(b) The Minnesota Office of Higher Education must identify
methods to compile and distribute information on publishers that sell or
distribute course material for classroom use in postsecondary institutions in a
manner that meets the requirements and complies with subdivision 2. The Minnesota Office of Higher Education must
also evaluate ways to make this information available for use by students and
faculty in postsecondary institutions.
Sec. 3. [135A.26] AMERICAN MADE CLOTHING IN
COLLEGE BOOKSTORES.
A bookstore located on the campus of a public college
or university in Minnesota must only offer for sale clothing or articles of
apparel that are manufactured in the United States of America.
Sec. 4.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136A.06, is amended to read:
136A.06
FEDERAL FUNDS.
The Minnesota Office of Higher Education is designated
the state agency to apply for, receive, accept, and disburse to both public and
private institutions of higher education all federal funds which are allocated
to the state of Minnesota to support higher education programs, construction,
or other activities and which require administration by a state higher
education agency under the Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963, and any
amendments thereof, the Higher Education Act of 1965, and any amendments
thereof, and any other law which provides funds for higher education and
requires administration by a state higher education agency as enacted or may be
enacted by the Congress of the United States; provided that no commitment shall
be made that shall bind the legislature to make appropriations beyond current
allocations of funds. The office may
apply for, receive, accept, and disburse all administrative funds available to
the office for administering federal funds to support higher education
programs, construction, or other activities.
The office also may apply for, receive, accept, and disburse any
research, planning, or program funds which are available for purposes
consistent with the provisions of this chapter.
In making application for and administering federal funds the office may
comply with any and all requirements of federal law and federal rules and
regulations to enable it to receive and accept such funds. The
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expenditure of any such funds received shall be
governed by the laws of the state, except insofar as federal regulations may
otherwise provide. The office may
contract with both public and private institutions in administering federal
funds, and such contracts shall not be subject to the provisions of chapter
16C. All such money received by the
office shall be deposited in the state treasury and, subject to section
3.3005, are hereby appropriated to it annually for the purpose for which
such funds are received. None of such
moneys shall cancel but shall be available until expended.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136A.08,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section,
the following terms have the meanings given them.
(b) "Province" and "provincial" mean
the Canadian province of Manitoba.
(c) "Resident of this
state" means a resident student as defined in section 136A.101,
subdivision 8.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136A.08, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 9.
Appeal; resident status. A student who does not meet the definition
of resident after residing in Minnesota for 12 months may appeal to the
director by providing documentation on the student's reasons for residing in
Minnesota. The director may grant
resident status to the student upon determining the documentation establishes
that postsecondary education was not the student's principle reason for
residing in Minnesota.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136A.101,
subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Eligible
institution. "Eligible
institution" means a postsecondary educational institution located in this
state or in a state with which the office has entered into a higher education
reciprocity agreement on state student aid programs that (1) requires, as a
condition of enrollment, that each entering Minnesota resident student must
complete the federal application for student aid (FAFSA), and is either
(2) operated by this state or the Board of Regents of the University of
Minnesota, or (2) (3) is operated privately and, as determined by
the office, meets all of the following: (i) maintains academic standards
substantially equivalent to those of comparable institutions operated in this
state; (ii) is licensed or registered as a postsecondary institution by the
office or another state agency; and (iii) by July 1, 2011, is participating in
the federal Pell Grant program under Title IV of the Higher Education Act of
1965, as amended.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136A.121,
subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Grant
stipends. The grant stipend shall be
based on a sharing of responsibility for covering the recognized cost of
attendance by the applicant, the applicant's family, and the government. The amount of a financial stipend must not
exceed a grant applicant's recognized cost of attendance, as defined in subdivision
6, after deducting the following:
(1) the assigned student
responsibility of at least 46 45 percent of the cost of attending
the institution of the applicant's choosing;
(2) the assigned family
responsibility as defined in section 136A.101; and
(3) the amount of a federal Pell
grant award for which the grant applicant is eligible.
The minimum financial stipend is $100
per academic year.
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Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136A.121,
subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Cost
of attendance. (a) The recognized
cost of attendance consists of allowances specified in law for living and miscellaneous
expenses, and an allowance for tuition and fees equal to the lesser of the
average tuition and fees charged by the institution, or the tuition and fee
maximums established in law. The
tuition and fee maximum for a student enrolled in a two-year program is the
maximum tuition and fee amount charged at a two-year college within the
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities.
The tuition and fee maximum for a student enrolled in a four-year
program shall be set in law.
(b) For a student registering for less
than full time, the office shall prorate the cost of attendance to the actual
number of credits for which the student is enrolled.
(c) The recognized cost of attendance
for a student who is confined to a Minnesota correctional institution shall
consist of the tuition and fee component in paragraph (a), with no allowance
for living and miscellaneous expenses.
(d) For the purpose of this
subdivision, "fees" include only those fees that are mandatory and
charged to full-time resident students attending the institution. Fees do not include charges for tools,
equipment, computers, or other similar materials where the student retains
ownership. Fees include charges for
these materials if the institution retains ownership. Fees do not include optional or punitive
fees.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136A.121,
subdivision 9, is amended to read:
Subd. 9. Awards. An undergraduate student who meets the office's
requirements is eligible to apply for and receive a grant in any year of
undergraduate study unless the student has obtained a baccalaureate degree or
previously has been enrolled full time or the equivalent for eight ten
semesters or the equivalent, excluding courses taken from a Minnesota
school or postsecondary institution which is not participating in the state
grant program and from which a student transferred no credit. A student who withdraws from enrollment for
active military service is entitled to an additional semester or the equivalent
of grant eligibility. A student enrolled
in a two-year program at a four-year institution is only eligible for the
tuition and fee maximums established by law for two-year institutions.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136A.1701,
subdivision 10, is amended to read:
Subd. 10. Prohibition
on use of state money. Except as
provided in section 136A.1787, paragraph (a), no money originating from
state sources in the state treasury shall be made available for student loans
under this section and all student loans shall be made from money originating
from nonstate sources.
Sec. 12. [136A.1787]
SELF LOAN REVENUE BONDS ANNUAL CERTIFICATE OF NEED.
(a) In order to ensure the payment of
the principal of and interest on bonds and notes of the office and the
continued maintenance of the loan capital fund under section 136A.1785, the
office shall annually determine and certify to the governor, on or before
December 1, the amount, if any:
(1) needed to restore the loan capital
fund to the minimum amount required by a resolution or indenture relating to
any bonds or notes of the office, not exceeding the maximum amount of principal
and interest to become due and payable in any subsequent year on all bonds or
notes which are then outstanding;
(2) determined by the office to be
needed in the immediately ensuing fiscal year, with other funds pledged and
estimated to be received during that year, for the payment of the principal and
interest due and payable in that year on all outstanding bonds and notes; and
(3) needed to restore any debt service
fund securing any outstanding bonds or notes of the office to the amount
required in a resolution or indenture relating to such outstanding bonds or
notes.
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(b) The governor shall include and
submit the amounts certified by the office in accordance with this section to the
legislature in the budget for the following fiscal year, or in a supplemental
budget if the regular budget for that year has previously been approved.
Sec. 13. [136A.1795]
LARGE ANIMAL VETERINARIAN LOAN FORGIVENESS PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1.
Definitions. (a) For purposes of this section, the
following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Veterinarian" means an
individual who has been awarded a doctor of veterinary medicine degree from the
College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota.
(c) "Designated rural area"
means an area in Minnesota outside the counties of Anoka, Carver, Dakota,
Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington, excluding the cities of Duluth,
Mankato, Moorhead, Rochester, and St. Cloud.
(d) "Emergency
circumstances" means those conditions that make it impossible for the
participant to fulfill the service commitment, including death, total and
permanent disability, or temporary disability lasting more than two years.
(e) "Qualified educational
loan" means a government, commercial, or foundation loan for actual costs
paid for tuition, reasonable education expenses, and reasonable living expenses
related to the education of a veterinarian.
Subd. 2.
Establishment; administration. (a) The director of the Minnesota Office
of Higher Education shall establish and administer a loan forgiveness program
for large animal veterinarians who:
(1) agree to practice in designated
rural areas that are considered underserved; and
(2) work full time in a practice that
is at least 50 percent involved with the care of food animals.
(b) Appropriations made to the
program do not cancel and are available until expended.
Subd. 3.
Eligibility. (a) To be eligible to participate in the
loan forgiveness program, an individual must:
(1) be a veterinarian who has been
awarded a veterinary medicine degree within three years of submitting an
application under this section, or be enrolled in the veterinarian degree
program and making satisfactory progress in the College of Veterinary Medicine,
University of Minnesota; and
(2) submit an application to the
director of the Minnesota Office of Higher Education in the form and manner
prescribed by the director.
(b) An applicant selected to
participate must sign a contract agreeing to complete a five-year service
obligation to practice as required under subdivision 2, paragraph (a).
Subd. 4.
Loan forgiveness. (a) The director of the Minnesota Office
of Higher Education may select a maximum of five applicants each year for participation
in the loan forgiveness program, within the limits of available funding. Applicants are responsible for securing their
own qualified educational loans.
(b) The director must select
participants based on their suitability for practice serving the designated
rural area, as indicated by experience or training. The director must give preference to
applicants closest to completing their training.
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(c) The director must make annual
disbursements directly to the participant of $15,000 or the balance of the
participant's qualifying educational loans, whichever is less, for each year
that a participant meets the service obligation required under subdivision 3,
paragraph (b), up to a maximum of five years.
(d) Before receiving loan repayment
disbursements and as requested, the participant must complete and return to the
director an affidavit of practice form provided by the director verifying that
the participant is practicing as required under subdivision 2, paragraph
(a). The participant must provide the
director with verification that the full amount of loan repayment disbursement
received by the participant has been applied toward the designated loans. After each disbursement, verification must be
received by the director and approved before the next loan repayment
disbursement is made.
(e) Participants who move their
practice remain eligible for loan repayment as long as they practice as
required under subdivision 2, paragraph (a).
Subd. 5.
Penalty for nonfulfillment. If a participant does not fulfill the
required minimum commitment of service required under subdivision 3, paragraph
(b), the director of the Minnesota Office of Higher Education must collect from
the participant the total amount paid to the participant under the loan
forgiveness program plus interest at a rate established according to section
270C.40. The director must deposit the
money collected in the state general fund.
The director must allow waivers of all or part of the money owed the
director as a result of a nonfulfillment penalty if emergency circumstances
prevented fulfillment of the service obligation.
Subd. 6.
Rules. The director may adopt rules to implement
this section.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136F.02,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Membership. The board consists of 15 members appointed
by the governor elected by the legislature in a joint convention,
including three members who are students who have attended an institution for
at least one year and are currently enrolled at least half time in a degree,
diploma, or certificate program in an institution governed by the board. The student members shall include one member
from a community college, one member from a state university, and one member
from a technical college. One member
representing labor must be appointed after considering the recommendations made
under section 136F.045. The governor is
not bound by the recommendations.
Appointments to the board are with the advice and consent of the
senate. At least one member of the
board must be a resident of each congressional district. All other members must be appointed
elected to represent the state at large.
In selecting appointees, the governor must consider the needs of the
board of trustees and the balance of the board membership with respect to labor
and business representation and racial, gender, geographic, and ethnic
composition.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136F.04, is
amended to read:
136F.04 STUDENT BOARD MEMBER SELECTION.
Subdivision 1. Responsibility. Notwithstanding section 136F.03, The State
University Student Association and the State College Student Association shall
each have the responsibility for recruiting, screening, and recommending
qualified candidates to the joint committee for their student members of
the board.
Subd. 2. Criteria. After consulting with the Board of
Trustees Candidate Advisory Council, The student associations shall jointly
develop a statement of the selection criteria to be applied to potential
candidates.
Subd. 3. Recruiting
and screening. Each student association
shall develop processes for identifying and recruiting qualified candidates and
for screening those candidates.
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Subd. 4. Recommendations. Each student association shall recommend at
least two and not more than four candidates for its student member. By April 15 February 15 of the even-numbered
year in which its members' term expires, each student association shall
submit its recommendations to the governor joint committee. The governor is not bound by these
recommendations.
Sec. 16.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136F.045, is amended to read:
136F.045
LABOR ORGANIZATION BOARD MEMBER SELECTION PROCESS.
The Minnesota AFL-CIO shall recruit and screen
qualified labor candidates to be recommended to the governor for appointment
joint committee for election to the board.
The organization must develop a process for selecting candidates, and a
statement of selection criteria for board membership that is consistent with
the requirements under section 136F.02, subdivision 1. The organization must recommend at least two
and no more than four candidates to the governor joint committee beginning
in 2010 and every six years thereafter.
Recommendations must be made by April 15 February 15 of
the even-numbered year in which the governor makes appointments
joint committee makes recommendations for candidates to be elected to the
board. The governor is not bound by
the recommendations.
Sec. 17. [136F.047] TRUSTEE NOMINATION AND
ELECTION.
Subdivision 1. Joint
legislative committee. The
joint legislative committee consists of the members of the higher education
budget and policy divisions in each body of the legislature. The chairs of the divisions from each body
shall be cochairs of the joint legislative committee. A majority of the members from each body is a
quorum of the joint committee.
Subd. 2. Meeting. By March 15 of each odd-numbered year, or
at a date agreed to by concurrent resolution, the joint legislative committee
shall meet to consider recommendations for trustee of the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities for possible presentation to a joint convention of
the legislature. The joint committee
must meet as many times as necessary for the purpose of interviewing
candidates, recommending candidates for the joint committee to consider, and voting
for candidates for recommendation to the joint convention.
Subd. 3. Recommendations
The joint committee may recommend to the joint convention candidates
nominated by the joint committee. If a
vacancy exists for a student board member or a member recommended under this
section, the joint committee must consider the recommendations made by the
responsible organizations to the joint committee for those vacancies. Candidates for any vacancy may be nominated
for consideration by the joint committee only if the nomination receives the support
of at least three house of representatives members of the committee and two
senate members of the committee. A
candidate must receive a majority vote of members from the house of
representatives on the joint committee and from the senate on the joint
committee to be recommended to the joint convention. The joint committee may recommend no more
than two candidates for each vacancy. In
recommending candidates to the joint convention, the joint committee must
consider the needs of the board of trustees and the balance of the board
membership with respect to gender, racial, and ethnic composition.
Sec. 18.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 136F.46, subdivision 3, is amended to
read:
Subd. 3. Solicitation. Efforts to secure payroll deductions authorized
in subdivision 1 may not interfere with, require a modification of, nor be
conducted during the period of a payroll deduction fund drive for employees
authorized by section 309.501 43A.50.
Sec. 19. [136F.705] UNDERGRADUATE TUITION
GUARANTEE.
(a) A Minnesota resident student who first enrolls in
a degree program at a state college or university beginning in the fall of 2010
or later is guaranteed a stable tuition for up to four consecutive academic
years.
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(b) For an undergraduate student enrolled in a
baccalaureate degree program at a state university, the tuition charged to the
student for each semester of enrollment during a four-year period, beginning
with the first semester of enrollment, must not exceed the amount of tuition
that the student was charged for the first semester of enrollment. For a student who continues to be enrolled
after four consecutive academic years, the tuition rate for each semester in
excess of four years is equal to the tuition rate paid by new enrollees at the
state university.
(c) For an undergraduate student enrolled in an
associate degree program at a college, the tuition charged to the student for
each semester of enrollment during a two-year period, beginning with the first
semester of enrollment, must not exceed the amount of tuition that the student
was charged for the first semester of enrollment. For a student who continues to be enrolled
after two consecutive academic years, the tuition rate for each semester in
excess of two years is equal to the tuition rate for new enrollees at the
college.
Sec. 20. [137.0225] UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP.
The Board of Regents may establish a scholarship to
help offset the impact of rising tuition for Minnesota students from
middle-income families. To be eligible
for a scholarship under this section, a student must be a Minnesota resident
undergraduate from a family that is not Pell eligible with an annual adjusted
gross income not to exceed $100,000.
Sec. 21.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 137.0246, subdivision 2, is amended to
read:
Subd. 2. Regent nomination joint committee. (a) The joint legislative committee consists
of the members of the higher education budget and policy divisions in each
house of the legislature. The chairs of
the divisions from each body shall be cochairs of the joint legislative
committee. A majority of the members
from each house is a quorum of the joint committee.
(b) By February 28 of each odd-numbered year, or at a
date agreed to by concurrent resolution, the joint legislative committee shall
meet to consider the advisory council's recommendations for regent of
the University of Minnesota for possible presentation to a joint convention of
the legislature.
(c) The joint committee may recommend to the joint
convention candidates recommended by the advisory council and the other
candidates nominated by the joint committee. A candidate other than those recommended
by the advisory council may be nominated for consideration by the joint
committee only if the nomination receives the support of at least three house
of representatives members of the committee and two senate members of the
committee. A candidate must receive a
majority vote of members from the house of representatives and from the senate
on the joint committee to be recommended to the joint convention. The joint committee may recommend no more
than one candidate two candidates for each vacancy. In recommending nominees, the joint committee
must consider the needs of the board of regents and the balance of the board
membership with respect to gender, racial, and ethnic composition.
(d) The joint committee must meet twice, approximately
one week apart. The first meeting is for
the purpose of interviewing candidates and recommending candidates for the
joint committee to consider. The second
meeting is for the purpose of voting for candidates for recommendation to the
joint convention.
Sec. 22.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 137.025, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. Appropriations not for buildings. The commissioner of finance shall pay no
money to the University of Minnesota pursuant to a direct appropriation, other
than an appropriation for buildings, until the university first certifies to
the commissioner of finance that its aggregate balances in the temporary
investment pool, cash, or separate investments, resulting from all state
maintenance and special appropriations do not exceed $7,000,000, or any other
amount specified in the act making the appropriation, plus one-third of all
tuition and fee
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2786
payments from the previous fiscal year. Upon this certification, The commissioner of finance shall pay 1/12 of the annual appropriation to the university shall
be paid at the beginning on the 21st day of each month. Additional payments shall be made by the
commissioner of finance whenever the state appropriations and tuition aggregate
balances in the temporary investment pool, cash, or separate investments are
reduced below the indicated levels. If the 21st day of the month falls
on a Saturday or Sunday, the monthly payment shall be made on the Monday
immediately following the 21st.
Sec. 23. [137.105]
UNDERGRADUATE TUITION GUARANTEE.
A Minnesota resident student who first
enrolls in a degree program at the University of Minnesota beginning in the
fall of 2010 or later is guaranteed a stable tuition for up to four consecutive
academic years. For an undergraduate
student enrolled in a baccalaureate degree program, the tuition charged to the
student for each semester of enrollment during a four-year period, beginning
with the first semester of enrollment, must not exceed the amount of tuition
that the student was charged for the first semester of enrollment. For a student who continues to be enrolled
after four consecutive academic years, the tuition rate for each semester in
excess of four years is equal to the tuition rate paid by new enrollees at the
University of Minnesota.
Sec. 24. [137.701]
UNIVERSITY NEIGHBORHOOD DEVELOPMENT.
Subdivision 1.
Purpose. In order to support and create
environments surrounding the campuses of the University of Minnesota in
Minneapolis and Duluth that are conducive to the purposes of higher education
and vital communities, the Board of Regents, the city of Minneapolis, and the
city of Duluth are requested to create with surrounding neighborhoods an
appropriate organization in each city, to cooperate in the development of those
neighborhoods. The purpose of each
organization is to improve the university's Minneapolis and Duluth campus area
neighborhoods including, without limitation, the following:
(1) providing and supporting the
development of good quality university neighborhood housing, including housing
for students, faculty, employees, alumni, and others who may wish to live in
the university area neighborhoods;
(2) encouraging and assisting
university faculty, staff, students, and others to live in the neighborhood as
long-term residents;
(3) supporting and assisting
appropriate business development in commercial areas of the neighborhood; and
(4) cooperating and coordinating
planning and development in all matters affecting the neighborhood with local
government, businesses, residents, and other stakeholders in the neighborhood.
Subd. 2.
Membership. The organization created by the Board of
Regents and the city of Minneapolis shall include representatives from the
organizations currently represented on the University District Alliance Steering
Committee. The Board of Regents and the
city of Duluth may establish the membership of an organization for the purposes
of subdivision 1.
Subd. 3.
Report. The Board of Regents, the city of
Minneapolis, and the city of Duluth are requested to report by January 15,
2010, to the chairs of the legislative committees with primary jurisdiction
over higher education policy and finance on the status and activities of the
organization that is created.
Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 299A.45, subdivision
4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Renewal. Each award must be given for one academic
year and is renewable for a maximum of eight ten semesters or the
equivalent. A student who withdraws from
enrollment for active military service is entitled to an additional semester or
the equivalent of grant eligibility. An
award must not be given to a dependent child who is 23 years of age or older on
the first day of the academic year.
Journal of the
House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2787
Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 340A.404,
subdivision 4a, is amended to read:
Subd. 4a. State-owned
recreation; entertainment facilities.
Notwithstanding any other law, local ordinance, or charter provision,
the commissioner may issue on-sale intoxicating liquor licenses:
(1) to the state agency
administratively responsible for, or to an entity holding a concession or
facility management contract with such agency for beverage sales at, the premises
of any Giants Ridge Recreation Area building or recreational improvement area
owned by the state in the town of White city of Biwabik, St.
Louis County;
(2) to the state agency
administratively responsible for, or to an entity holding a concession or
facility management contract with such agency for beverage sales at, the
premises of any Ironworld Discovery Center building or facility owned by the
state at Chisholm; and
(3) to the Board of Regents of the
University of Minnesota for events at Northrop Auditorium, the intercollegiate
football stadium, or at no more than seven other locations within the
boundaries of the University of Minnesota, provided that the Board of Regents
has approved an application for a license for the specified location and
provided that the application for a stadium or arena location allows for the
legal sale of intoxicating liquor throughout the stadium or arena and does not
limit the sale of intoxicating liquor to premium seating areas or suites.
The commissioner shall charge a fee
for licenses issued under this subdivision in an amount comparable to the fee
for comparable licenses issued in surrounding cities.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment and applies to applications for an
on-sale liquor license made after December 1, 2008.
Sec. 27. REPORT;
FEDERAL TEXTBOOK INFORMATION REQUIREMENTS.
By January 15, 2010, the Minnesota
Office of Higher Education must report to the committees of the legislature
responsible for higher education finance on the implementation of textbook
information requirements under United States Code, title 20, section 1015b,
effective July 1, 2010. In preparing the
report, the office must work with representatives of textbook publishers, the
Student Advisory Council, Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, the
University of Minnesota, and the Private College Council. At a minimum, the report must include a
template that publishers may use to provide the required information in a
consistent format to all Minnesota campuses, and make recommendations of
methods to disseminate pricing information to support students and faculty in
making well informed decisions about course materials.
Sec. 28. MINNESOTA
STATE COLLEGE - SOUTHEAST TECHNICAL; AVIATION TRAINING CENTER.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
section 136F.60, subdivision 5, the net proceeds of the sale or disposition of
the Aviation Training Center in Winona operated by Minnesota State College -
Southeast Technical, after paying all expenses incurred in selling the property
and retiring any remaining debt attributable to the project, are appropriated
to the Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities for
use in a capital project at the Winona campus and need not be paid to the
commissioner of finance, as would otherwise be required by Minnesota Statutes,
section 16A.695, subdivision 3.
When the sale is complete and the
sale proceeds have been applied as provided in this section, Minnesota
Statutes, section 16A.695, no longer applies to the property and the property
is no longer state bond financed property.
Journal of the
House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2788
Sec. 29. MINNESOTA
STATE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES DEGREE REQUIREMENTS.
Until July 2, 2012, an associate of
applied science degree offered by a college in the Minnesota State Colleges and
Universities system is exempt from the 60-semester credit length limit for an associate
degree specified in the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities Board Policy
number 3.36, part 3, subpart C. The
chancellor may consider criteria for waiving the credit length limits under
this board policy for emerging or innovative programs. By January 2, 2012, the Minnesota State
College Faculty and the Minnesota State College Student Association must
present a joint report to the house of representatives and senate committees
with jurisdiction over higher education policy on a process for reviewing the
credit requirements for an associate of applied science degree.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment and applies to associate of applied
science degrees whether first offered before, on, or after that date.
Sec. 30. POWER
OF YOU PILOT PROGRAMS.
Subdivision 1.
Power of you pilot programs. The Board of Trustees of the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities shall establish power of you pilot programs in
suburban and rural sites. The pilots
shall comply with Minnesota Statutes, section 136F.19.
Subd. 2.
Suburban pilot selection. By July 1, 2009, the board of trustees
shall select one technical college and one community college or
community-technical college in the Minneapolis-St. Paul suburban area to
develop a new power of you pilot program in conjunction with Metropolitan State
University. Each college in the pilot
program must work with a high school partner selected by the board in the
Minneapolis-St. Paul suburban area.
Subd. 3.
Rural pilot selection. By July 1, 2009, the Board of Trustees
shall select two rural colleges to participate in the power of you pilot
programs. One of the pilot programs must
be a multicampus college in an agricultural part of the state and the other a
multicampus college in a nonagricultural part of the state dependent on natural
resources. Each college in the pilot
program must work with a high school partner selected by the board.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 31. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections
136A.127; 136F.03; and 137.0245, are repealed.
Sec. 32. EFFECTIVE
DATE.
Sections 1 to 5 are effective the day
following final enactment."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to
higher education; amending higher education provisions; establishing and
modifying certain grants and programs; making technical changes; regulating
certain activities and practices; establishing and amending certain
scholarships; providing a tuition guarantee; regulating board member and
trustee nominations and elections; requiring a certificate of need; defining
terms; requiring a report; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes
2008, sections 135A.08, subdivision 1; 135A.25, subdivision 4; 136A.06;
136A.08, subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; 136A.101, subdivision 4;
136A.121, subdivisions 5, 6, 9; 136A.1701, subdivision 10; 136F.02, subdivision
1; 136F.04; 136F.045; 136F.46, subdivision 3; 137.0246, subdivision 2; 137.025,
subdivision 1; 299A.45, subdivision 4; 340A.404, subdivision 4a; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 135A; 136A; 136F; 137;
repealing Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 136A.127; 136F.03; 137.0245."
With the recommendation that when so amended
the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The report was adopted.
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2789
Lenczewski from the
Committee on Taxes to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1118, A bill for
an act relating to taxation; modifying disposition of solid waste management
tax revenue; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 297H.13, subdivision 2.
Reported the same back with
the recommendation that the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee on
Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Carlson from the Committee on Finance to
which was referred:
H. F. No. 1122, A bill for an act relating
to appropriations; appropriating money for agriculture, the Board of Animal
Health, veterans, and the military; changing certain agricultural and animal
health requirements and programs; establishing a program; eliminating a sunset;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 3.737, subdivision 1; 3.7371,
subdivision 3; 17.03, subdivision 12; 18B.01, subdivision 8, by adding
subdivisions; 18B.065, subdivision 2a, by adding subdivisions; 18B.26,
subdivision 3; 18E.03, subdivision 2; 28A.085, subdivision 1; 32.394,
subdivision 8; 41A.09, subdivisions 2a, 3a; 197.585, subdivision 5; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 18B; 41A; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 17.49, subdivision 3; 38.02, subdivisions 3,
4.
Reported the same back with the following
amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting
clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
AGRICULTURE
Section
1. SUMMARY OF APPROPRIATIONS.
The amounts shown in this section summarize direct
appropriations, by fund, made in this article.
2010 2011 Total
General $45,023,000 $43,938,000 $88,961,000
Agricultural $800,000 $800,000 $1,600,000
Remediation $388,000 $388,000 $776,000
Total $46,211,000 $45,126,000 $91,337,000
Sec. 2. AGRICULTURE
APPROPRIATIONS.
The sums shown in the
columns marked "Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and
for the purposes specified in this act.
The appropriations are from the general fund, or another named fund, and
are available for the fiscal years indicated for each purpose. The figures "2010" and
"2011" used in this act mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2010, or June 30, 2011,
respectively. "The first year" is fiscal year 2010. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2011. "The biennium" is fiscal years 2010
and 2011.
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of
Page 2790
APPROPRIATIONS
Available for the Year
Ending June 30
2010 2011
Sec.
3. DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE
Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation $38,190,000 $37,105,000
Appropriations by Fund
2010 2011
General 37,002,000 35,917,000
Remediation 388,000 388,000
Agricultural 800,000 800,000
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd.
2. Protection Services 13,078,000 13,078,000
Appropriations by Fund
General 12,690,000 12,690,000
Remediation 388,000 388,000
$388,000 the first year and $388,000
the second year are from the remediation fund for administrative funding for
the voluntary cleanup program.
$75,000 the first year and $75,000 the
second year are for compensation for destroyed or crippled animals under
Minnesota Statutes, section 3.737. If
the amount in the first year is insufficient, the amount in the second year is
available in the first year.
$75,000 the first year and $75,000 the
second year are for compensation for crop damage under Minnesota Statutes,
section 3.7371. If the amount in the
first year is insufficient, the amount in the second year is available in the
first year.
If the commissioner determines that
claims made under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.737 or 3.7371, are unusually
high, amounts appropriated for either program may be transferred to the
appropriation for the other program.
$150,000 the first year and $150,000
the second year are for plant pest surveys.
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2791
Subd. 3. Agricultural
Marketing and Development 4,782,000 4,782,000
$186,000 the first year and $186,000 the second year
are for transfer to the Minnesota grown account and may be used as grants for
Minnesota grown promotion under Minnesota Statutes, section 17.102. Grants may be made for one year. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.28, the appropriations encumbered under contract on or before June 30,
2011, for Minnesota grown grants in this paragraph are available until June 30,
2013. $50,000 of the appropriation in each year is for efforts that identify
and promote Minnesota grown products in retail food establishments including
but not limited to restaurants, grocery stores, and convenience stores.
$100,000 the first year and $100,000 the second year
are for grants to farmers for demonstration projects involving sustainable
agriculture as authorized in Minnesota Statutes, section 17.116. Of the amount for grants, up to $20,000 may
be used for dissemination of information about the demonstration projects. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.28, the appropriations encumbered under contract on or before June 30,
2011, for sustainable agriculture grants in this paragraph are available until
June 30, 2013.
$103,000 the first year and $103,000 the second year
are to provide training and technical assistance to county and town officials
relating to livestock siting issues and local zoning and land use planning,
including maintenance of the checklist template clarifying the federal, state,
and local government requirements for consideration of an animal agriculture
modernization or expansion project. For
the training and technical assistance program, the commissioner shall continue
to seek guidance, advice, and support of livestock producer organizations,
general agricultural organizations, local government associations, academic
institutions, other government agencies, and others with expertise in land use
and agriculture.
$77,000 the first year and $77,000 the second year are
for integrated pest management activities.
$10,000 the first year and $10,000 the second year are
for annual cost-share payments to resident farmers or persons who sell,
process, or package agricultural products in this state for the costs of
organic certification. Annual cost-share
payments per farmer must be two-thirds of the cost of the certification or
$350, whichever is less. In any year
that a resident farmer or person who sells, processes, or packages agricultural
products in this state receives a federal organic certification cost-share
payment, that resident farmer or person is not eligible for state cost-share
payments. A certified farmer is eligible
to receive annual certification cost-share payments for up to five years. The
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2792
commissioner may allocate any excess appropriation in
either fiscal year for organic market and program development including organic
producer education efforts, assistance for persons transitioning from
conventional to organic agriculture, or sustainable agriculture demonstration
grants authorized under Minnesota Statutes, section 17.116, and pertaining to
organic research or demonstration. Any
unencumbered balance does not cancel at the end of the first year and is
available for the second year.
Subd. 4. Bioenergy
and Value-Added Agriculture 12,168,000 12,168,000
$12,168,000 the first year and $12,168,000 the second
year are for ethanol producer payments under Minnesota Statutes, section
41A.09. If the total amount for which all
producers are eligible in a quarter exceeds the amount available for payments,
the commissioner shall make payments on a pro rata basis. If the appropriation exceeds the total amount
for which all producers are eligible in a fiscal year for scheduled payments
and for deficiencies in payments during previous fiscal years, the balance in
the appropriation is available to the commissioner for value-added agricultural
programs including the value-added agricultural processing and marketing grant
program under Minnesota Statutes, section 17.101, subdivision 5. The appropriation remains available until
spent. The base appropriation for fiscal
year 2012 is $12,668,000.
Subd. 5. Administration
and Financial Assistance 8,162,000 7,077,000
Appropriations by Fund
2010 2011
General 7,362,000 6,277,000
Agricultural 800,000 800,000
$25,000 the first year is for a grant to members of a
farmers market association to reimburse up to $1,000 of membership fees for
members who incurred crop damages as a result of the hail storm in 2008.
$755,000 the first year and $755,000
the second year are for continuation of the dairy development and profitability
enhancement and dairy business planning grant programs established under Laws
1997, chapter 216, section 7, subdivision 2, and Laws 2001, First Special
Session chapter 2, section 9, subdivision 2.
The commissioner may allocate the available sums among permissible
activities, including efforts to improve the quality of milk produced in the
state in the proportions that the commissioner deems most beneficial to
Minnesota's dairy farmers.
Journal of
the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2793
The commissioner must submit a work
plan detailing plans for expenditures under this program to the chairs of the
house of representatives and senate committees dealing with agricultural policy
and budget on or before the start of each fiscal year. If significant changes are made to the plans
in the course of the year, the commissioner must notify the chairs.
$50,000 the first year and $50,000 the
second year are for the Northern Crops Institute. These appropriations may be spent to purchase
equipment.
$19,000 the first year and $19,000 the
second year are for a grant to the Minnesota Livestock Breeders Association.
$250,000 the first year and $250,000
the second year are for grants to the Minnesota Agricultural Education and
Leadership Council for programs of the council under Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 41D.
$474,000 the first year and $474,000
the second year are for payments to county and district agricultural societies
and associations under Minnesota Statutes, section 38.02, subdivision 1. Of this amount, $4,000 each year is for 4-H
premiums. Aid payments to county and
district agricultural societies and associations shall be disbursed no later
than July 15 of each year. These payments
are the amount of aid from the state for an annual fair held in the previous
calendar year.
$1,000 the first year and $1,000 the
second year are for grants to the Minnesota State Poultry Association.
$65,000 the first year and $65,000 the
second year are for annual grants to the Minnesota Turf Seed Council for basic
and applied research on the improved production of forage and turf seed related
to new and improved varieties. The grant
recipient may subcontract with a qualified third party for some or all of the
basic and applied research.
$50,000 the first year and $50,000 the
second year are for grants to the Minnesota Turf Seed Council for basic and
applied agronomic research on native plants, including plant breeding but not
genetic engineering, nutrient management, pest management, disease management,
yield, and viability. Any plantings
conducted with money from this appropriation must protect existing native
prairies from genetic contamination. The
Minnesota Turf Seed Council may subcontract with a qualified third party for
some or all of the basic or applied research.
The Minnesota Turf Seed Council must actively participate in the
Agricultural Utilization Research Institute's Renewable Energy Roundtable and
no later than February 1, 2011, must report to the house of representatives and
senate committees with jurisdiction over agriculture finance. This is a onetime appropriation.
Journal of
the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20, 2009 - Top of Page 2794
$500,000 the first year and $500,000
the second year are for grants to Second Harvest Heartland on behalf of
Minnesota's six Second Harvest food banks for the purchase of milk for
distribution to Minnesota's food shelves and other charitable organizations
that are eligible to receive food from the food banks. Milk purchased under the grants must be
acquired from Minnesota milk processors and based on low-cost bids. The milk must be allocated to each Second
Harvest food bank serving Minnesota according to the formula used in the
distribution of United States Department of Agriculture commodities under The
Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP).
Second Harvest Heartland must submit quarterly reports to the
commissioner on forms prescribed by the commissioner. The reports must include, but are not limited
to, information on the expenditure of funds, the amount of milk purchased, and
the organizations to which the milk was distributed. Second Harvest Heartland may enter into
contracts or agreements with food banks for shared funding or reimbursement of
the direct purchase of milk. Each food
bank receiving money from this appropriation may use up to two percent of the
grant for administrative expenses.
$1,000,000 the first year is for the 21st century
agricultural reinvestment program in Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.12. Priority must be given to livestock programs
under Minnesota Statutes, section 17.118.
The commissioner may use up to 4.5 percent of this appropriation for
costs incurred to administer the program.
$100,000 the first year and $100,000 the second year
are for transfer to the Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State Colleges and
Universities for mental health counseling support to farm families and business
operators through farm business management programs at Central Lakes College
and Ridgewater College.
$18,000 the first year and $18,000 the second year are
for grants to the Minnesota Horticultural Society.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 18C.131,
$800,000 the first year and $800,000 the second year are from the agricultural
fund for grants for fertilizer research as awarded by the Minnesota
Agricultural Fertilizer Research and Education Council under Minnesota Statutes,
section 18C.71. No later than
February 1, 2011, the commissioner shall report to the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over agriculture finance. The report must include the progress and
outcome of funded projects as well as the sentiment of the council concerning
the need for additional research funds.
$60,000 the first year is for grants to four pilot
food projects as required under this article.
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2795
Sec. 4.
BOARD OF ANIMAL HEALTH
$5,156,000 $5,156,000
$2,531,000 the first year and $2,531,000 the second
year are for bovine tuberculosis eradication efforts in cattle herds.
$100,000 the first year and $100,000 the second year
are for a program to control paratuberculosis (Johne's disease) in domestic
bovine herds.
$40,000 the first year and $40,000 the second year are
for a program to investigate the avian pneumovirus disease and to identify the
infected flocks. This appropriation must
be matched on a dollar-for-dollar or in-kind basis with nonstate sources and is
in addition to money currently designated for turkey disease research. Costs of blood sample collection, handling,
and transportation, in addition to costs associated with early diagnosis tests
and the expenses of vaccine research trials, may be credited to the match.
$400,000 the first year and $400,000 the second year
are for the purposes of cervidae inspection as authorized in Minnesota
Statutes, section 35.155.
Sec. 5. AGRICULTURAL UTILIZATION RESEARCH
INSTITUTE $2,865,000 $2,865,000
Sec. 6.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 3.737, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. Compensation required. (a) Notwithstanding section 3.736,
subdivision 3, paragraph (e), or any other law, a livestock owner shall be
compensated by the commissioner of agriculture for livestock that is destroyed
by a gray wolf or is so crippled by a gray wolf that it must be destroyed. Except as provided in this section, the owner
is entitled to the fair market value of the destroyed livestock as determined
by the commissioner, upon recommendation of a university extension agent or a
conservation officer. In any fiscal
year, a livestock owner may not be compensated for a destroyed animal claim
that is less than $100 in value and may be compensated up to $20,000, as
determined under this section. In any
fiscal year, the commissioner may provide compensation for claims filed under
this section and section 3.7371 up to a total of $100,000 for both
programs combined the amount expressly appropriated for this purpose.
(b) Either the agent or the conservation officer must
make a personal inspection of the site.
The agent or the conservation officer must take into account factors in
addition to a visual identification of a carcass when making a recommendation
to the commissioner. The commissioner,
upon recommendation of the agent or conservation officer, shall determine
whether the livestock was destroyed by a gray wolf and any deficiencies in the
owner's adoption of the best management practices developed in subdivision
5. The commissioner may authorize
payment of claims only if the agent or the conservation officer has recommended
payment. The owner shall file a claim on
forms provided by the commissioner and available at the university extension
agent's office.
Sec. 7.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 3.7371, subdivision 3, is amended to
read:
Subd. 3. Compensation. The crop owner is entitled to the target
price or the market price, whichever is greater, of the damaged or destroyed
crop plus adjustments for yield loss determined according to agricultural
stabilization and conservation service programs for individual farms, adjusted
annually, as determined by the commissioner,
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2796
upon recommendation of the county extension agent for
the owner's county. The commissioner,
upon recommendation of the agent, shall determine whether the crop damage or
destruction is caused by elk and, if so, the amount of the crop that is damaged
or destroyed. In any fiscal year, a crop
owner may not be compensated for a damaged or destroyed crop that is less than
$100 in value and may be compensated up to $20,000, as determined under this
section, if normal harvest procedures for the area are followed. In any fiscal year, the commissioner may
provide compensation for claims filed under this section and section 3.737
up to a total of $100,000 for both programs combined the amount
expressly appropriated for this purpose.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 13.643, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7.
Research, monitoring, or
assessment data. (a) Except
as provided in paragraph (b), the following data created, collected, and
maintained by the Department of Agriculture during research, monitoring, or the
assessment of farm practices and related to natural resources, the environment,
agricultural facilities, or agricultural practices are classified as private or
nonpublic:
(1) names, addresses, telephone
numbers, and e-mail addresses of study participants or cooperators; and
(2) location of research, study site,
and global positioning system data.
(b) The following data is public:
(1) location data and unique well
numbers for wells and springs unless protected under section 18B.10 or another
statute or rule; and
(2) data from samples collected from a
public water supply as defined in Minnesota Rules, part 4720.5100.
(c) The Department of Agriculture may
disclose data collected under paragraph (a) if the Department of Agriculture
determines that there is a substantive threat to human health and safety or to
the environment, or to aid in the law enforcement process. The Department of Agriculture may also
disclose data with written consent of the subject of the data.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 17.03,
subdivision 12, is amended to read:
Subd. 12. Contracts;
appropriation. The commissioner may
accept money as part of a contract with any public or private entity to provide
statutorily prescribed services by the department. A contract must specify the services to be
provided by the department and the amount and method of reimbursement. Money generated in a contractual agreement
under this section must be deposited in a special revenue fund and is
appropriated to the department for purposes of providing services specified in
the contracts. Contracts under this
section must be processed in accordance with section 16C.05. The commissioner must report revenues
collected and expenditures made under this section to the chairs of the
Environment and Natural Resources Finance Committee in the house of
representatives and the Environment and Agriculture Budget Division in the
senate by January 15 of each odd-numbered year.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 17.115,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Loan
criteria. (a) The shared savings
loan program must provide loans for purchase of new or used machinery and
installation of equipment for projects that make environmental improvements or
and enhance farm profitability.
Eligible loan uses do not include seed, fertilizer, or fuel.
(b) Loans may not exceed $25,000
$40,000 per individual applying for a loan and may not exceed $100,000 for
loans to four or more individuals on joint projects. The loan repayment period may be up to seven
years as determined by project cost and energy savings. The interest rate on the loans must not
exceed six percent. For loans made
from May 1, 2004, to June 30, 2007, the interest rate must not exceed three
percent.
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(c) Loans may only be made to residents of this state
engaged in farming.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective the day
following final enactment.
Sec. 11. [17.459] HORSES.
Subdivision 1. Classification
as livestock. Horses and
other equines raised for the purposes of riding, driving, farm or ranch work,
competition, racing, recreation, sale, or as breeding stock are livestock. Horses may be used for meat, hides, and
animal by-products. Horses and their
products are livestock and farm products for purposes of financial transactions
and collateral.
Subd. 2. Agricultural
pursuit. Raising horses and
other equines is agricultural production and an agricultural pursuit. Horse breeding farms, horse training farms,
horse boarding farms, or farms combining those purposes, are an intensive
agricultural use that may be accomplished on limited acreage. These intensive agricultural uses are
necessary for horses in order to control the feeding, safety, and overall
condition of the animals.
Subd. 3. Nonapplicability
for property tax laws. This
section does not apply to the treatment of land used for raising horses under
chapter 273.
Sec. 12.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.75, is amended to read:
18.75
PURPOSE.
It is the policy of the legislature that residents of
the state be protected from the injurious effects of noxious weeds on public
health, the environment, public roads, crops, livestock, and other
property. Sections 18.76 to 18.88
18.91 contain procedures for controlling and eradicating noxious weeds
on all lands within the state.
Sec. 13.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.76, is amended to read:
18.76
CITATION.
Sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91 may be
cited as the "Minnesota Noxious Weed Law."
Sec. 14.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. Scope.
The definitions in this section apply to sections 18.76 to 18.88
18.91.
Sec. 15.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77, is amended by adding a
subdivision to read:
Subd. 2a. Certified
noxious weed free. "Certified
noxious weed free" means that the material being certified has been
inspected, tested, or processed to devitalize or remove the noxious weed
propagating parts in order to verify that viable noxious weed propagating parts
are not present in the material.
Sec. 16.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77, is amended by adding a
subdivision to read:
Subd. 2b. Commissioner. "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of agriculture.
Sec. 17.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77, subdivision 3, is amended to
read:
Subd. 3. Control. "Control" means to destroy all
or part of the aboveground growth of noxious weeds by a lawful method that
prevents the maturation and spread of noxious weed propagating parts from one
area to another.
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Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3a.
County-designated employee. "County-designated employee"
means a person designated by a county board to oversee the responsibilities in
section 18.81, subdivision 1a.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77,
subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Growing
crop. "Growing crop" means
an agricultural, horticultural, or forest crop that has been planted or
regularly maintained and intended for harvest. "Growing crop" does
not mean a permanent pasture, hay meadow, woodlot, or other noncrop area which
contains native or seeded perennial plants used for grazing or hay purposes,
and which is not harvested on a regular basis.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 5a.
Inspector. "Inspector" means the
commissioner, agent of the commissioner, county agricultural inspector, local
weed inspector, or assistant weed inspector.
Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 8a.
Noxious weed management plan. "Noxious weed management plan"
means controlling or eradicating noxious weeds in the manner designated in a
management plan developed for the area or site where the infestations are found
using specific strategies or methods that are to be used singly or in
combination to achieve control or eradication.
Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.77, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 13.
Weed management area. "Weed management area" means a
designated area where special or unique noxious weed control or eradication
strategies or methods are used according to a specific management plan
developed for each management area established.
Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.78,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Generally. A person owning land, a person occupying
land, or a person responsible for the maintenance of public land shall control
or eradicate all noxious weeds on the land at a time and in a manner ordered by
the county agricultural inspector or a local weed an inspector or
county-designated employee.
Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.78, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3.
Cooperative weed control
agreement. The commissioner,
municipality, or county agricultural inspector or county-designated employee
may enter into a cooperative weed control agreement with a landowner or weed
management area group to establish a mutually agreed upon noxious weed
management plan for up to three years duration, whereby a noxious weed problem
will be controlled without additional enforcement action. If a property owner fails to comply with the
noxious weed management plan, an individual notice may be served.
Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.79, is
amended to read:
18.79 DUTIES OF COMMISSIONER.
Subdivision 1. Enforcement. The commissioner of agriculture shall
administer and enforce sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91.
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Subd. 2. Authorized
agents. County agricultural
inspectors may administer and enforce sections 18.76 to 18.88
18.91. A county-designated employee may
enforce sections 18.78, 18.82, 18.83, 18.84, 18.86, and 18.87.
Subd. 3. Entry
upon land. To administer and enforce
sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91, county agricultural inspectors
and local weed inspectors an inspector or county-designated employee may
enter upon land without consent of the owner and without being subject to an
action for trespass or any damages.
Subd. 4. Rules. The commissioner may adopt necessary rules
under chapter 14 for the proper enforcement of sections 18.76 to 18.88
18.91.
Subd. 5. Order
for control or eradication of noxious weeds. A county agricultural inspector or a local
weed An inspector or county-designated employee may order the
control or eradication of noxious weeds on any land within the state
inspector's or county-designated employee's jurisdiction.
Subd. 6. Initial
Training for control or eradication of noxious weeds. The commissioner shall conduct initial
training considered necessary for weed inspectors and
county-designated employees in the enforcement of the Minnesota Noxious
Weed Law. The director of the Minnesota
Extension Service may conduct educational programs for the general public that
will aid compliance with the Minnesota Noxious Weed Law. Upon request, the commissioner may provide
information and other technical assistance to the county weed inspector or
county-designated employee to aid in the performance of responsibilities
specified by the county board under section 18.81, subdivision 1.
Subd. 7. Meetings
and reports. The commissioner shall
designate by rule the reports that are required to be made and the
meetings that must be attended by weed inspectors.
Subd. 8. Prescribed
forms. The commissioner shall
prescribe the forms to be used by weed inspectors and
county-designated employees in the enforcement of sections 18.76 to 18.88
18.91.
Subd. 9. Injunction. If the county agricultural inspector or
county-designated employee applies to a court for a temporary or permanent
injunction restraining a person from violating or continuing to violate
sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91, the injunction may be issued
without requiring a bond.
Subd. 10. Prosecution. On finding that a person has violated
sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91, the county agricultural inspector or
county-designated employee may start court proceedings in the locality in
which the violation occurred. The county
attorney may prosecute actions under sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91
within the county attorney's jurisdiction.
Subd. 12. Noxious-weed-free
forage and mulch certification agency.
The official certification agency for noxious-weed-free forage and,
mulch shall, soil, gravel, and other material must be determined
by the commissioner of agriculture in consultation with the director of
the Minnesota agricultural experiment station.
The commissioner may also certify forage, mulch, soil, gravel, or
other material as noxious weed free.
Subd. 13.
Noxious weed designation. The commissioner, in consultation with the
Noxious Weed Advisory Committee, shall determine which plants are noxious weeds
subject to control under sections 18.76 to 18.91. The commissioner shall prepare, publish, and
revise as necessary, but at least once every three years, a list of noxious
weeds and their designated classification.
The list must be distributed to the public by the commissioner who may
request the help of the University of Minnesota Extension, the county
agricultural inspectors, and any other organization the commissioner considers
appropriate to assist in the distribution.
The commissioner may, in consultation with the Noxious Weed Advisory
Committee, accept and consider noxious weed designation petitions from
Minnesota citizens or Minnesota organizations or associations.
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Subd. 14. County
petition. A county may
petition the commissioner to designate specific noxious weeds which are a
control problem in the county.
Subd. 15. Noxious
weed management. The
commissioner, in consultation with the Noxious Weed Advisory Committee, shall
develop management strategies and criteria for each noxious weed category.
Subd. 16. Gifts;
grants; contracts; funds. The
commissioner, counties, and municipalities may apply for and accept any gift,
grant, contract, or other funds or grants-in-aid from the federal government or
other public and private sources for noxious weed control purposes.
Subd. 17. Noxious
weed investigation. The
commissioner shall investigate the subject of noxious weeds and conduct investigations
outside this state to protect the interest of the agricultural industry,
forests, or the environment of this state from noxious weeds not generally
growing in Minnesota.
Subd. 18. Noxious
weed education. The
commissioner shall disseminate information and conduct educational campaigns
with respect to control of noxious weeds or invasive plants to enhance
regulatory compliance and voluntary efforts to eliminate or manage these
plants. The commissioner shall call and
attend meetings and conferences dealing with the subject of noxious weeds. The commissioner shall maintain on the
department's Web site weed management information including but not limited to
the roles and responsibilities of citizens and government entities under
sections 18.76 to 18.91 and specific guidance as to whom a person should
contact to report a noxious weed issue.
Subd. 19. State
and federal lands. The
commissioner shall inform and direct state and federal agencies regarding their
responsibility to manage and control noxious weeds on land that those agencies
own, control, or manage.
Subd. 20. Interagency
cooperation. The commissioner
shall cooperate with agencies of federal, state, and local governments and
other persons in carrying out duties under sections 18.76 to 18.91.
Subd. 21. Weed
management area. The
commissioner, in consultation with the Noxious Weed Advisory Committee, may
establish a weed management area to include a part of one or more counties or
all of one or more counties of this state and shall include all the land within
the boundaries of the area established.
Weed management plans developed for a weed management area must be
reviewed and approved by the commissioner and the Noxious Weed Advisory
Committee. Weed management areas may
seek funding under section 18.90.
Sec. 26.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.80, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. County agricultural inspectors; and
county-designated employees. The
county board shall either appoint at least one or more county
agricultural inspectors that meet the qualifications prescribed by
rule. The appointment must be for a
period of time which is sufficient to accomplish the duties assigned to this
position inspector to carry out the duties specified under section
18.81, subdivisions 1a and 1b, or a county-designated employee to carry out the
duties specified under section 18.81, subdivision 1a. A notice of the appointment of either a
county agricultural inspector or county-designated employee must be
delivered to the commissioner within ten 30 days of the
appointment and it must establish the initial number of hours to be worked
annually.
Sec. 27.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.81, is amended by adding a
subdivision to read:
Subd. 1a. Duties;
county agricultural inspectors and county-designated employees. The county agricultural inspector or
county-designated employee shall be responsible for:
(1) the enforcement provisions under sections 18.78,
18.82, 18.83, 18.84, 18.86 and 18.87; and
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(2) providing a point of contact
within the county for noxious weed issues.
Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.81, is amended
by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1b.
County agricultural
inspectors. In addition to
the mandatory duties specified in subdivision 1a, the county board must specify
the responsibilities of the county agricultural inspector in the annual work
plan. The responsibilities may include:
(1) to see that sections 18.76 to
18.91 and rules adopted under those sections are carried out within the
inspector's jurisdiction;
(2) to see that sections 21.80 to
21.92 and rules adopted under those sections are carried out within the
inspector's jurisdiction;
(3) to see that sections 21.71 to
21.78 and rules adopted under those sections are carried out within the
inspector's jurisdiction;
(4) to participate in the control
programs for invasive plant species, feed, fertilizer, pesticide, and plant and
insect pests when requested, in writing, to do so by the commissioner;
(5) to participate in other
agricultural programs under the control of the commissioner when requested, in
writing, by the commissioner to do so;
(6) to administer the distribution of
funds allocated by the county board to the county agricultural inspector for
noxious weed control and eradication within the county;
(7) to submit reports and attend
meetings that the commissioner requires;
(8) to publish a general weed notice
of the legal duty to control noxious weeds in one or more legal newspapers of
general circulation throughout the county; and
(9) to be the primary contact in the
county for all plant biological control agents.
Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.81,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Nonperformance
by inspectors; reimbursement for expenses.
If local weed inspectors neglect or fail to do their duty as prescribed
in this section, the county agricultural inspector shall or
county-designated employee, in consultation with the commissioner, may
issue a notice to the inspector providing instructions on how and when to do
their duty. If, after the time allowed
in the notice, the local weed inspector has not complied as directed, the
county agricultural inspector or county-designated employee may consult
with the commissioner to perform the duty for the local weed
inspector. A claim for the expense of
doing the local weed inspector's duty is a legal charge against the
municipality in which the inspector has jurisdiction. The county agricultural inspector doing
or county-designated employee overseeing the work may file an itemized
statement of costs with the clerk of the municipality in which the work was performed. The municipality shall immediately issue
proper warrants to the county for the work performed. If the municipality fails to issue the
warrants, the county auditor may include the amount contained in the itemized
statement of costs as part of the next annual tax levy in the municipality and
withhold that amount from the municipality in making its next apportionment.
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Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.82,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Permits. Except as provided in section 21.74, if a
person wants to transport along a public highway materials or equipment
containing the propagating parts of weeds designated as noxious by the
commissioner, the person must secure a written permit for transportation of the
material or equipment from a local weed inspector or county agricultural
an inspector or county-designated employee. Inspectors or county-designated employees
may issue permits to persons residing or operating within their
jurisdiction. If the noxious weed
propagating parts are removed from materials and equipment or devitalized
before being transported, a permit is not needed.
Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.82,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Duration
of permit; revocation. A permit
under subdivision 1 is valid for up to one year after the date it is issued
unless otherwise specified by the weed inspector or county-designated
employee issuing the permit. The
permit may be revoked if a county agricultural inspector or local weed an
inspector or county-designated employee determines that the
applicant has not complied with this section.
Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.83, is
amended to read:
18.83 CONTROL; ERADICATION; NOTICES; EXPENSES.
Subdivision 1. General
weed notice. A general notice for
noxious weed control or eradication must be published on or before May 15 of
each year and at other times the commissioner directs. Failure of the county agricultural weed
inspector or county-designated employee to publish the general notice
does not relieve a person from the necessity of full compliance with sections
18.76 to 18.88 18.91 and related rules. The published notice is legal and sufficient
notice when an individual notice cannot be served.
Subd. 2. Individual
notice. A weed An inspector
may find it necessary to secure more prompt or definite control or eradication
of noxious weeds than is accomplished by the published general notice. In these special or individual instances,
involving one or a limited number of persons, the weed inspector or
county-designated employee having jurisdiction shall serve individual
notices in writing upon the person who owns the land and the person who
occupies the land, or the person responsible for or charged with the
maintenance of public land, giving specific instructions on when and how named
noxious weeds are to be controlled or eradicated. Individual notices provided for in this
section must be served in the same manner as a summons in a civil action in the
district court or by certified mail.
Service on a person living temporarily or permanently outside of the weed
inspector's or county-designated employee's jurisdiction may be made by
sending the notice by certified mail to the last known address of the person,
to be ascertained, if necessary, from the last tax list in the county
treasurer's office.
Subd. 3. Appeal
of individual notice; appeal committee.
(1) A recipient of an individual notice may appeal, in writing, the
order for control or eradication of noxious weeds. This appeal must be filed with a member of
the appeal committee in the county where the land is located within two working
days of the time the notice is received.
The committee must inspect the land specified in the notice and report
back to the recipient and the inspector or county-designated employee
who issued the notice within five working days, either agreeing, disagreeing,
or revising the order. The decision may
be appealed in district court. If the
committee agrees or revises the order, the control or eradication specified in
the order, as approved or revised by the committee, may be carried out.
(2) The county board of
commissioners shall appoint members of the appeal committee. The membership must include a county
commissioner or municipal official and a landowner residing in the county. The expenses of the members may be reimbursed
by the county upon submission of an itemized statement to the county
auditor. At its option, the county board
of commissioners, by resolution, may delegate the duties of the appeal
committee to its board of adjustment established pursuant to section
394.27. When carrying out the duties of
the appeal committee, the zoning board of adjustment shall comply with all of
the procedural requirements of this section.
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Subd. 4. Control or eradication by inspector or
county-designated employee. If a
person does not comply with an individual notice served on the person or an
individual notice cannot be served, the weed inspector or county-designated
employee having jurisdiction shall have the noxious weeds controlled or
eradicated within the time and in the manner the weed inspector or
county-designated employee designates.
Subd. 5. Control or eradication by inspector or
county-designated employee in growing crop. A weed An inspector or
county-designated employee may consider it necessary to control or
eradicate noxious weeds along with all or a part of a growing crop to prevent
the maturation and spread of noxious weeds within the inspector's or
county-designated employee's jurisdiction.
If this situation exists, the weed inspector or
county-designated employee may have the noxious weeds controlled or
eradicated together with the crop after the appeal committee has reviewed the
matter as outlined in subdivision 3 and reported back agreement with the order.
Subd. 6. Authorization for person hired to enter
upon land. The weed inspector
or county-designated employee may hire a person to control or eradicate
noxious weeds if the person who owns the land, the person who occupies the
land, or the person responsible for the maintenance of public land has failed
to comply with an individual notice or with the published general notice when
an individual notice cannot be served.
The person hired must have authorization, in writing, from the weed
inspector or county-designated employee to enter upon the land.
Subd. 7. Expenses; reimbursements. A claim for the expense of controlling or
eradicating noxious weeds, which may include the costs of serving notices, is a
legal charge against the county in which the land is located. The officers having the work done must file
with the county auditor a verified and itemized statement of cost for all
services rendered on each separate tract or lot of land. The county auditor shall immediately issue
proper warrants to the persons named on the statement as having rendered
services. To reimburse the county for
its expenditure in this regard, the county auditor shall certify the total
amount due and, unless an appeal is made in accordance with section 18.84,
enter it on the tax roll as a tax upon the land and it must be collected as
other real estate taxes are collected.
If public land is involved, the amount due must be
paid from funds provided for maintenance of the land or from the general
revenue or operating fund of the agency responsible for the land. Each claim for control or eradication of
noxious weeds on public lands must first be approved by the commissioner of
agriculture.
Sec. 33.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.84, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. Counties and municipalities. Counties and municipalities are not liable
for damages from the noxious weed control program for actions conducted in
accordance with sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91.
Sec. 34.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.84, subdivision 2, is amended to
read:
Subd. 2. Appeal of charges to county board. A person who is ordered to control noxious
weeds under sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91 and is charged for
noxious weed control may appeal the cost of noxious weed control to the county
board of the county where the noxious weed control measures were undertaken
within 30 days after being charged. The
county board shall determine the amount and approve the charge and filing of a
lien against the property if it determines that the owner, or occupant if other
than the owner, responsible for controlling noxious weeds did not comply with
the order of the inspector or county-designated employee.
Sec. 35.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.84, subdivision 3, is amended to
read:
Subd. 3. Court Appeal of costs to district
court; petition. (a) A landowner
who has appealed person who is ordered to control noxious weeds under
sections 18.76 to 18.91 and is charged for the cost of noxious weed control
measures under subdivision 2 may petition for judicial review of the
charges. The petition must be filed
within 30 days after the conclusion of the hearing before the county board
being charged. The petition must be
filed with the
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court administrator in the county in which the land
where the noxious weed control measures were undertaken is located, together
with proof of service of a copy of the petition on the county auditor. No responsive pleadings may be required of
the county, and no court fees may be charged for the appearance of the county
in this matter.
(b) The petition must be captioned in
the name of the person making the petition as petitioner and respective county
as respondents. The petition must
include the petitioner's name, the legal description of the land involved, a
copy of the notice to control noxious weeds, and the date or dates on which
appealed control measures were undertaken.
(c) The petition must state with
specificity the grounds upon which the petitioner seeks to avoid the imposition
of a lien for the cost of noxious weed control measures.
Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.86, is
amended to read:
18.86 UNLAWFUL ACTS.
No person may:
(1) hinder or obstruct in any way the
county agricultural inspectors or local weed inspectors an inspector or
county-designated employee in the performance of their duties as
provided in under sections 18.76 to 18.88 18.91 or
related rules;
(2) neglect, fail, or refuse to
comply with section 18.82 or related rules in the transportation and use of
material or equipment infested with noxious weed propagating parts;
(3) sell material containing noxious
weed propagating parts to a person who does not have a permit to transport that
material or to a person who does not have a screenings permit issued in
accordance with section 21.74; or
(4) neglect, fail, or refuse to
comply with a general notice or an individual notice to control or eradicate
noxious weeds.
Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.87, is
amended to read:
18.87 PENALTY.
A violation of section 18.86 or a
rule adopted under that section is a misdemeanor. County agricultural inspectors, local weed
Inspectors, or county-designated employees, or their appointed
assistants are not subject to the penalties of this section for failure,
neglect, or refusal to perform duties imposed on them by sections 18.76 to 18.88
18.91.
Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18.88, is
amended to read:
18.88 NOXIOUS WEED PROGRAM FUNDING.
Subdivision 1. County. The county board shall pay, from the general
revenue or other fund for the county, the expenses for the county agricultural
inspector position or county-designated employee, for noxious weed
control or eradication on all land owned by the county or on land that for
which the county is responsible for the its maintenance of,
and for the expenses of the appeal committee, and for necessary
expenses as required for quarantines within the county. Use of funding from grants and other sources
for the administration and enforcement of the Minnesota Noxious Weed Law must
be approved by the county board.
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Subd. 2. Municipality. The municipality shall pay, from the general
revenue or other fund for the municipality, the necessary expenses of the local
weed inspector in the performance of duties required for quarantines within
the municipality, and for noxious weed control or eradication on land owned
by the municipality or on land for which the municipality is responsible for
its maintenance. Use of funding from
grants and other sources for the administration and enforcement of the
Minnesota Noxious Weed Law must be approved by the town board or city mayor.
Subd. 3. Funding. Funding in the form of grants or cost
sharing may be provided to the counties for the performance of their activities
under section 18.81, subdivision 1.
Sec. 39. [18.89] NOXIOUS WEED AND INVASIVE PLANT
SPECIES ASSISTANCE FUND.
The noxious weed and invasive plant species assistance
fund is created in the state treasury.
The fund may be used to carry out the purposes of section 18.90. Any money appropriated to the fund and any
money received by the fund as gifts or grants or other private or public funds
obtained for the purposes in section 18.91 must be credited to the fund. The money in the account is continuously
appropriated to the commissioner to implement section 18.90.
Sec. 40. [18.90] GRANT PROGRAM.
(a) From funds available in the noxious weed and
invasive plant species assistance fund established in section 18.89, the
commissioner shall administer a grant program to assist counties and
municipalities and other weed management entities in the cost of implementing
and maintaining noxious weed control programs and in addressing special weed
control problems. The commissioner shall
receive applications by counties, municipalities, weed management areas, and
weed management entities for assistance under this section and, in consultation
with the Noxious Weed Advisory Committee, award grants for any of the following
eligible purposes:
(1) to conduct applied research to solve locally
significant weed management problems;
(2) to demonstrate innovative control methods or land
management practices which have the potential to reduce landowner costs to
control noxious weeds or improve the effectiveness of noxious weed control;
(3) to encourage the ongoing support of weed
management areas;
(4) to respond to introductions or infestations of
invasive plants that threaten or potentially threaten the productivity of
cropland and rangeland over a wide area;
(5) to respond to introductions or infestations of
invasive plant species that threaten or potentially threaten the productivity
of biodiversity of wildlife and fishery habitats on public and private lands;
(6) to respond to special weed control problems
involving weeds not included in the list of noxious weeds published and
distributed by the commissioner;
(7) to conduct monitoring or surveillance activities
to detect, map, or determine the distribution of invasive plant species and to
determine susceptible locations for the introduction or spread of invasive
plant species; and
(8) to conduct educational activities.
(b) The commissioner shall select and prioritize
applications for assistance under this section based on the following
considerations:
(1) the seriousness of the noxious weed or invasive
plant problem or potential problem addressed by the project;
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(2) the ability of the project to
provide timely intervention to save current and future costs of control and
eradication;
(3) the likelihood that the project
will prevent or resolve the problem or increase knowledge about resolving
similar problems in the future;
(4) the extent to which the project
will leverage federal funds and other nonstate funds;
(5) the extent to which the applicant
has made progress in addressing noxious weed or invasive plant problems;
(6) the extent to which the project
will provide a comprehensive approach to the control or eradication of noxious
weeds;
(7) the extent to which the project
will reduce the total population or area of infestation of a noxious weed;
(8) the extent to which the project
uses the principles of integrated vegetation management and sound science; and
(9) other factors that the
commissioner determines to be relevant.
(c) Nothing in this section may be
construed to relieve a person of the duty or responsibility to control the
spread of noxious weeds on lands owned and controlled by the person.
Sec. 41. [18.91]
ADVISORY COMMITTEE; MEMBERSHIP.
Subdivision 1.
Duties. The commissioner shall consult with the
Noxious Weed Advisory Committee to advise the commissioner concerning
responsibilities under the noxious weed control program. The committee shall also evaluate species for
invasiveness, difficulty of control, cost of control, benefits, and amount of
injury caused by them. For each species
evaluated, the committee shall recommend to the commissioner on which noxious
weed list or lists, if any, the species should be placed. Species currently designated as prohibited or
restricted noxious weeds must be reevaluated every three years for a
recommendation on whether or not they need to remain on the noxious weed
lists. Members of the committee are not
entitled to reimbursement of expenses nor payment of per diem. Members shall serve two-year terms with
subsequent reappointment by the commissioner.
Subd. 2.
Membership. The commissioner shall appoint members,
which shall include representatives from the following:
(1) horticultural science, agronomy,
and forestry at the University of Minnesota;
(2) the nursery and landscape
industry in Minnesota;
(3) the seed industry in Minnesota;
(4) the Department of Agriculture;
(5) the Department of Natural
Resources;
(6) a conservation organization;
(7) an environmental organization;
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(8) at least two farm organizations;
(9) the county agricultural
inspectors;
(10) city, township, and county
governments;
(11) the Department of
Transportation;
(12) the University of Minnesota
Extension;
(13) the timber and forestry industry
in Minnesota;
(14) the Board of Water and Soil
Resources; and
(15) soil and water conservation
districts.
Subd. 3.
Additional duties. The committee shall conduct evaluations of
terrestrial plant species to recommend if they need to be designated as noxious
weeds and into which noxious weed classification they should be designated,
advise the commissioner on the implementation of the Minnesota Noxious Weed
Law, and assist the commissioner in the development of management criteria for
each noxious weed category.
Subd. 4.
Organization. The committee shall select a chair from
its membership. Meetings of the
committee may be called by or at the direction of the commissioner or upon
direction of the chair.
Subd. 5.
Expiration. Notwithstanding section 15.059,
subdivision 5, the committee expires June 30, 2013.
Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.01, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1a.
Agricultural pesticide. "Agricultural pesticide" means a
pesticide that bears labeling that meets federal worker protection agricultural
use requirements as provided by Code of Federal Regulations, title 40, parts
156 and 170 (2008).
Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.01, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1b.
Agricultural pesticide dealer. "Agricultural pesticide dealer"
means a person who distributes an agricultural pesticide in the state or into
the state to an end user. This action
would commonly be described as a retail sale.
Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.01,
subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. Distribute. "Distribute" means offer for sale,
sell, barter, ship, deliver for shipment, receive and deliver, and offer to
deliver pesticides in this state or into this state.
Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.01, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 14b.
Nonagricultural pesticide. "Nonagricultural pesticide" means
a pesticide that does not bear labeling that meets federal worker protection
agricultural use requirements as provided by Code of Federal Regulation, title
40, parts 156 and 170 (2008).
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Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.065,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Collection
and disposal. The commissioner of
agriculture shall establish and operate a program to collect and dispose of
waste pesticides. The program must be
made available to agricultural and residential nonagricultural
pesticide end users whose waste generating activity occurs in this state. Waste pesticide generated in another state
is not eligible for collection under this section.
Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.065,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Implementation. (a) The commissioner may obtain a United
States Environmental Protection Agency hazardous waste identification number to
manage the waste pesticides collected.
(b) The commissioner may not
limit the type and quantity of waste pesticides accepted for collection and may
not assess pesticide end users for portions of the costs incurred.
Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.065,
subdivision 2a, is amended to read:
Subd. 2a. Disposal
site requirement. (a) For
agricultural waste pesticides, the commissioner must designate a place in each
county of the state that is available at least every other year for
persons to dispose of unused portions of agricultural pesticides. The commissioner shall consult with the
person responsible for solid waste management and disposal in each county to
determine an appropriate location and to advertise each collection event. The commissioner may provide a collection
opportunity in a county more frequently if the commissioner determines that a
collection is warranted.
(b) For residential
nonagricultural waste pesticides, the commissioner must provide periodic
a disposal opportunities opportunity each year in each
county.
(c) As provided under subdivision 7, the commissioner may
enter into cooperative agreements with county or regional solid waste
management entities local units of government to provide these
the collections required under paragraph (a) or (b) and shall
provide these entities a local unit of government, as part of the
cooperative agreement, with funding for reasonable costs incurred
including, but not limited to, related supplies, transportation, advertising,
and disposal costs as well as reasonable overhead costs.
(c) (d) A person who collects waste pesticide under paragraph
(a) or (b) this section shall, on a form provided or in a method approved
by the commissioner, record information on each waste pesticide product
collected including, but not limited to, the quantity collected and either the
product name, and its active ingredient or ingredients,
quantity, and or the United States Environmental Protection Agency
registration number, on a form provided by the commissioner. The person must submit this information to
the commissioner at least annually by January 30.
Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.065,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Information
and; education; report. (a) The commissioner shall provide
informational and educational materials regarding waste pesticides and the
proper management of waste pesticides to the public.
(b) No later than March 15 each year,
the commissioner must report the following to the legislative committees with
jurisdiction over agriculture finance:
(1) each instance of a refusal to
collect waste pesticide or the assessment of a fee to a pesticide end user as
authorized in subdivision 2, paragraph (b); and
(2) waste pesticide collection
information including a discussion of the type and quantity of waste pesticide
collected by the commissioner and any entity collecting waste pesticide under
subdivision 7 during the previous calendar year, a summary of waste pesticide
collection trends, and any corresponding program recommendations.
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Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.065,
subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. Cooperative
agreements. (a) The
commissioner may enter into cooperative agreements with state agencies and
local units of government for administration of the waste pesticide collection
program. The commissioner shall ensure
that the program is carried out in all counties. If the commissioner cannot contract with
another party to administer the program in a county, the commissioner shall
perform collections according to the provisions of this section.
(b) The commissioner, according to the
terms of a cooperative agreement between the commissioner and a local unit of
government, may establish limits for unusual types or excessive quantities of
waste pesticide offered by pesticide end users to the local unit of government.
Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.065, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 8.
Waste pesticide program
surcharge. The commissioner shall
annually collect a waste pesticide program surcharge of $50 on each pesticide
product registered in the state as part of a pesticide product registration
application under section 18B.26, subdivision 3.
Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.065, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 9.
Waste pesticide cooperative
agreement account. (a) A
waste pesticide cooperative agreement account is created in the agricultural
fund. Notwithstanding section 18B.05,
the proceeds of surcharges imposed under subdivision 8 must be deposited in the
agricultural fund and credited to the waste pesticide cooperative agreement
account.
(b) Money in the waste pesticide
cooperative agreement account, including interest, is appropriated to the
commissioner and may only be used for costs incurred under a cooperative
agreement pursuant to this section.
(c) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), if
the amount available in the waste pesticide cooperative agreement account in
any fiscal year exceeds the amount obligated to local units of government under
subdivision 7, the excess is appropriated to the commissioner to perform waste
pesticide collections under this section.
Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.26,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Requirement. (a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) to
(d), a person may not use or distribute a pesticide in this state unless it is
registered with the commissioner.
Pesticide registrations expire on December 31 of each year and may be
renewed on or before that date for the following calendar year.
(b) Registration is not required if a
pesticide is shipped from one plant or warehouse to another plant or warehouse
operated by the same person and used solely at the plant or warehouse as an ingredient
in the formulation of a pesticide that is registered under this chapter.
(c) An unregistered pesticide that was
previously registered with the commissioner may be used for a period of two
years following the cancellation of the registration of the pesticide, unless
the commissioner determines that the continued use of the pesticide would cause
unreasonable adverse effects on the environment, or with the written permission
of the commissioner. To use the unregistered
pesticide at any time after the two-year period, the pesticide end user must
demonstrate to the satisfaction of the commissioner, if requested, that the
pesticide has been continuously registered under a different brand name or by a
different manufacturer and has similar composition, or, the pesticide end user
obtains the written permission of the commissioner.
(d) The commissioner may allow
specific pesticide products that are not registered with the commissioner to be
distributed in this state for use in another state.
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(e) Each pesticide with a unique
United States Environmental Protection Agency pesticide registration number or
a unique brand name must be registered with the commissioner.
(f) It is unlawful for a person to distribute
or use a pesticide in the state, or to sell into the state for use in the
state, any pesticide product that has not been registered by the commissioner
and for which the applicable pesticide registration application fee, gross
sales fee, or waste pesticide program surcharge is not paid pursuant to
subdivisions 3 and 4.
(g) Every person who sells for use in
the state a pesticide product that has been registered by the commissioner
shall pay to the commissioner the applicable registration application fees,
sales fees, and waste pesticide program surcharges. These sales expressly include all sales made
electronically, telephonically, or by any other means that result in a
pesticide product being shipped to or used in the state. There is a rebuttable presumption that
pesticide products that are sold or distributed in or into the state by any
person are sold or distributed for use in the state.
Sec. 54. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.26,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Registration
application and gross sales fee.
(a) For an agricultural pesticide, a registrant shall pay an
annual registration application fee for each agricultural pesticide
to be registered, and this fee is set at 0.4 percent of annual gross sales
within the state and annual gross sales of pesticides used in the state, with a
minimum nonrefundable fee of $250 $350. The fee is due by December 31 preceding the
year for which the application for registration is made. The fee is nonrefundable.
The registrant shall determine when
and which pesticides are sold or used in this state. (b) For a nonagricultural pesticide,
a registrant shall pay a minimum annual registration application fee for each
nonagricultural pesticide of $350. The
fee is due by December 31 preceding the year for which the application for
registration is made. The fee is
nonrefundable. The registrant of a
nonagricultural pesticide shall pay, in addition to the $350 minimum fee, a fee
of 0.5 percent of annual gross sales of the nonagricultural pesticide in the
state and the annual gross sales of the nonagricultural pesticide sold into the
state for use in this state. The
commissioner may not assess a fee under this paragraph if the amount due based
on percent of annual gross sales is less than $10. The registrant shall secure sufficient sales information of nonagricultural
pesticides distributed into this state from distributors and dealers,
regardless of distributor location, to make a determination. Sales of nonagricultural pesticides in
this state and sales of nonagricultural pesticides for use in this state
by out-of-state distributors are not exempt and must be included in the
registrant's annual report, as required under paragraph (c) (g),
and fees shall be paid by the registrant based upon those reported sales. Sales of nonagricultural pesticides in
the state for use outside of the state are exempt from the application
gross sales fee in this paragraph if the registrant properly documents the
sale location and distributors. A
registrant paying more than the minimum fee shall pay the balance due by March
1 based on the gross sales of the nonagricultural pesticide by the
registrant for the preceding calendar year.
The fee for disinfectants and sanitizers shall be the minimum. The minimum fee is due by December 31
preceding the year for which the application for registration is made. In each fiscal year, the commissioner shall
allocate from the pesticide regulatory account a sum sufficient to collect and
dispose of waste pesticides under section 18B.065. However, notwithstanding section 18B.065, if
the commissioner determines that the balance in the pesticide regulatory
account at the end of the fiscal year will be less than $500,000, the
commissioner may suspend waste pesticide collections or provide partial payment
to a person for waste pesticide collection.
The commissioner must notify as soon as possible and no later than
August 1 a person under contract to collect waste pesticides of an anticipated
suspension or payment reduction. A
pesticide determined by the commissioner to be a sanitizer or disinfectant is
exempt from the gross sales fee.
(c) For agricultural pesticides, a
licensed agricultural pesticide dealer shall pay a gross sales fee of 0.55
percent of annual gross sales of the agricultural pesticide in the state and
the annual gross sales of the agricultural pesticide sold into the state for
use in this state.
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(d) In those cases where a registrant
first sells an agricultural pesticide in or into the state to a pesticide end
user, the registrant must first obtain an agricultural pesticide dealer license
and is responsible for payment of the annual gross sales fee under paragraph
(c), record keeping under paragraph (i), and all other requirements of section
18B.316.
(e) If the total annual revenue from
fees collected by the commissioner on the registration and sale of pesticides
is less than $6,600,000 for revenue collected in fiscal year 2011, 2012, or
2013, the commissioner may increase pesticide sales and product registration
fees by the amount necessary to ensure this level of revenue is achieved.
(b) (f) An additional fee of $100 50 percent of the
registration application fee must be paid by the applicant for each
pesticide to be registered if the application is a renewal application that is
submitted after December 31.
(c) (g) A registrant must annually report to the commissioner
the amount and, type and annual gross sales of each
registered nonagricultural pesticide sold, offered for sale, or
otherwise distributed in the state. The report
shall be filed by March 1 for the previous year's registration. The commissioner shall specify the form of
the report or approve the method for submittal of the report and may require
additional information deemed necessary to determine the amount and type of pesticides
nonagricultural pesticide annually distributed in the state. The information required shall include the
brand name, United States Environmental Protection Agency registration
number and amount, and formulation of each nonagricultural pesticide
sold, offered for sale, or otherwise distributed in the state, but the
information collected, if made public, shall be reported in a manner which does
not identify a specific brand name in the report.
(h) A licensed agricultural pesticide
dealer must annually report to the commissioner the amount, type, and annual
gross sales of each registered agricultural pesticide sold, offered for sale,
or otherwise distributed in the state or into the state for use in the state. The report must be filed by January 31 for
the previous year's sales. The
commissioner shall specify the form, contents, and approved electronic method
for submittal of the report and may require additional information deemed
necessary to determine the amount and type of agricultural pesticide annually
distributed within the state or into the state.
The information required must include the brand name, United States
Environmental Protection Agency registration number, and amount of each agricultural
pesticide sold, offered for sale, or otherwise distributed in the state or into
the state.
(i) A person who registers a pesticide
with the commissioner under paragraph (b), or a registrant under paragraph (d),
shall keep accurate records for five years detailing all distribution or sales
transactions into the state or in the state and subject to a fee and surcharge
under this section.
(j) The records are subject to
inspection, copying, and audit by the commissioner and must clearly demonstrate
proof of payment of all applicable fees and surcharges for each registered
pesticide product sold for use in this state.
A person who is located outside of this state must maintain and make
available records required by this subdivision in this state or pay all costs
incurred by the commissioner in the inspecting, copying, or auditing of the
records.
(k) The commissioner may adopt by rule
regulations that require persons subject to audit under this section to provide
information determined by the commissioner to be necessary to enable the commissioner
to perform the audit.
(d) (l) A registrant who is required to pay more than the
minimum fee for any pesticide under paragraph (a) (b) must pay a
late fee penalty of $100 for each pesticide application fee paid after March 1
in the year for which the license is to be issued.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2009. However:
(1) the provisions of Minnesota
Statutes 2008, section 18B.26, subdivision 3, remain in effect until
December 31, 2010, for the registrants of pesticide products sold within
the state or used in the state during calendar year 2009; and
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(2) the commissioner of agriculture
may not implement paragraph (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), (j), (k), or (l)
until January 1, 2010.
Sec. 55. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.31,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. License. A pesticide dealer license:
(1) is issued by the commissioner
upon receipt and review of a complete initial or renewal application;
(2) is valid for one year and expires on December January
31 of each year unless it is suspended or revoked before that date;
(2) (3) is not transferable to another
location; and
(3) (4) must be prominently displayed to the
public in the pesticide dealer's place of business.
Sec. 56. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.31,
subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Application. (a) A person must apply to the commissioner
for a pesticide dealer license on the forms and in the manner required by the
commissioner.
(b) The commissioner may require an
additional demonstration of dealer qualification if the dealer has had a
license suspended or revoked, or has otherwise had a history of violations of
this chapter.
(c) An application for renewal of a
pesticide dealer license is not complete until the commissioner receives the
report and applicable fees required under section 18B.316, subdivision 8.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2010.
Sec. 57. [18B.316]
AGRICULTURAL PESTICIDE DEALER LICENSE AND REPORTING.
Subdivision 1.
Requirement. (a) A person must not distribute or sell an
agricultural pesticide in the state or into the state without first obtaining
an agricultural pesticide dealer license.
(b) Each location or place of
business from which an agricultural pesticide is distributed or sold in the
state or into the state is required to have a separate agricultural pesticide
dealer license.
(c) A person who is a licensed
pesticide dealer under section 18B.31 is not required to also be licensed under
this subdivision.
Subd. 2.
Exemption. A person who is a pesticide registrant
under provisions of this chapter is exempt from the requirement of subdivision
1, except in those cases where a registrant first sells an agricultural
pesticide in or into the state to a pesticide end user, the registrant must
first obtain an agricultural pesticide dealer license.
Subd. 3.
Resident agent. (a) A person required to be licensed under
subdivisions 1 and 2, or a person licensed as a pesticide dealer pursuant to
section 18B.31 and who operates from a location or place of business outside
the state and who distributes or sells an agricultural pesticide into the
state, must continuously maintain in this state the following:
(1) a registered office; and
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(2) a registered agent, who may be
either a resident of this state whose business office or residence is identical
with the registered office under clause (1), a domestic corporation or limited
liability company, or a foreign corporation of limited liability company
authorized to transact business in this state and having a business office
identical with the registered office.
A person licensed under this section
or section 18B.31 shall annually file with the commissioner, either at the time
of initial licensing or as part of license renewal, the name, address,
telephone number, and e-mail address of the licensee's registered agent.
For licensees under section 18B.31 who
are located in the state, the licensee is the registered agent.
Subd. 4.
Responsibility. The resident agent is responsible for the
acts of a licensed agricultural pesticide dealer, or of a licensed pesticide
dealer under section 18B.31 who operates from a location or place of business
outside the state and who distributes or sells an agricultural pesticide into
the state, as well as the acts of the employees of those licensees.
Subd. 5.
Records. A person licensed as an agricultural
pesticide dealer, or a person licensed as a pesticide dealer pursuant to
section 18B.31, must maintain for five years at the person's principal place of
business accurate records of purchases, sales, and distributions of
agricultural pesticides in and into this state, including those of its branch
locations. The records shall be made
available for audit under provisions of this chapter and chapter 18D.
Subd. 6.
Agricultural pesticide sales
invoices. Sales invoices for agricultural
pesticides sold in or into this state by a licensed agricultural pesticide
dealer or a pesticide dealer under this section must show the percent of gross
sales fee rate assessed and the gross sales fee paid under section 18B.26,
subdivision 3, paragraph (c). Only the
person who actually will pay the gross sales fee may show the rate or the
amount of the fee as a line item on the sales invoice.
Subd. 7.
License. An agricultural pesticide dealer license:
(1) is issued by the commissioner upon
receipt and review of a complete initial or renewal application;
(2) is valid for one year and expires
on January 31 of each year;
(3) is not transferable from one
location or place of business to another location or place of business; and
(4) must be prominently displayed to
the public in the agricultural pesticide dealer's place of business and in the
registered office of the resident agent.
Subd. 8.
Report of sales and payment to
the commissioner. A person
who is an agricultural pesticide dealer, or is a licensed pesticide dealer
under section 18B.31, who distributes or sells an agricultural pesticide in or
into the state, and a pesticide registrant pursuant to section 18B.26,
subdivision 3, paragraph (d), shall no later than January 31 of each year
report and pay applicable fees on annual gross sales of agricultural pesticides
to the commissioner pursuant to requirements under section 18B.26, subdivision
3, paragraphs (c) and (h).
Subd. 9.
Application. (a) A person must apply to the commissioner
for an agricultural pesticide dealer license on forms and in a manner approved
by the commissioner.
(b) The applicant must be the person
in charge of each location or place of business from which agricultural pesticides
are distributed or sold in or into the state.
(c) The commissioner may require that
the applicant provide information regarding the applicant's proposed operations
and other information considered pertinent by the commissioner.
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(d) The commissioner may require additional
demonstration of licensee qualification if the licensee has had a license suspended
or revoked, or has otherwise had a history of violations in another state or
violations of this chapter.
(e) A licensed agricultural pesticide dealer who
changes the dealer's address or place of business must immediately notify the
commissioner of the change.
(f) An application for renewal of an agricultural
pesticide dealer license is complete only when a report and any applicable
payment of fees under subdivision 8 are received by the commissioner.
Subd. 10. Application
fee. (a) An application for
an agricultural pesticide dealer license, or a renewal of an agricultural
pesticide dealer license, must be accompanied by a nonrefundable fee of $150.
(b) If an application for renewal of an agricultural
pesticide dealer license is not filed before January of the year for which the
license is to be issued, an additional fee of 50 percent of the application fee
must be paid by the applicant before the commissioner may issue the license.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective July 1,
2009. However, the commissioner of
agriculture may not implement subdivision 9, paragraph (f), until January 1,
2011.
Sec. 58. [18B.346] PESTICIDE APPLICATION ON
RAILROAD PROPERTY.
Subdivision 1. Applicability. This section applies only to common
carrier railroads.
Subd. 2. Safety
information. (a) In
coordination with common carrier railroad companies operating in this state,
the commissioner shall provide annual pesticide safety outreach opportunities
for railroad employees.
(b) A common carrier railroad that operates in this
state must provide annual employee pesticide safety training opportunities.
Subd. 3. Pesticide
applications. (a) A person
may not directly apply a restricted use pesticide to occupied or unoccupied
locomotives, track repair equipment, or on-track housing units unless the
pesticide is specifically labeled for that use.
(b) Employees of common carrier railroads must not be
required to work in affected areas in a manner that is inconsistent with the
pesticide label.
Subd. 4. Misuse
reporting. A common carrier
railroad or a commercial applicator hired by the common carrier railroad to
apply pesticide must report to the commissioner within four hours, or as soon
as practicable, any pesticide misuse known to the railroad company or
commercial applicator that occurred on railroad property or to other property
under the control of the railroad company.
For the purposes of this section, "misuse" means a pesticide application
that violates subdivision 3 or any provision in section 18B.07.
Sec. 59.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18B.37, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. Pesticide dealer. (a) A pesticide dealer must maintain records
of all sales of restricted use pesticides as required by the commissioner. Records must be kept at the time of sale on
forms supplied by the commissioner or on the pesticide dealer's forms if they
are approved by the commissioner.
(b) Records must be submitted annually with the
renewal application for a pesticide dealer license or upon request of the
commissioner.
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(c) Copies of records required under this
subdivision must be maintained by the pesticide dealer for a period of five
years after the date of the pesticide sale.
Sec. 60. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18C.415,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Effective
period. Other Licenses are
for the period from January 1 to the following December 31 and must be renewed
annually by the licensee before January 1.
A license is not transferable from one person to another, from the
ownership to whom issued to another ownership, or from one location to another
location.
Sec. 61. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18C.421, is
amended to read:
18C.421 DISTRIBUTOR'S TONNAGE REPORT.
Subdivision 1. Semiannual
statement Annual tonnage report.
(a) Each licensed distributor of fertilizer and each registrant of a
specialty fertilizer, soil amendment, or plant amendment must file a semiannual
statement for the periods ending December 31 and June 30 with the commissioner
on forms furnished by the commissioner stating the number of net tons and grade
of each raw fertilizer material distributed or the number of net tons of each
brand or grade of fertilizer, soil amendment, or plant amendment
registrant under section 18C.411 and licensee under section 18C.415 shall file
an annual tonnage report for the previous year ending June 30 with the
commissioner, on forms provided or approved by the commissioner, stating the
number of net tons of each brand or grade of fertilizer, soil amendment, or
plant amendment distributed in this state or the number of net tons and grade
of each raw fertilizer material distributed in this state during the
reporting period.
(b) A tonnage reports are
report is not required to be filed with submitted and an
inspection fee under section 18C.425, subdivision 6, is not required to be paid
to the commissioner from licensees by a licensee who distributed
distributes fertilizer solely by custom application.
(c) A report from a licensee who
sells to an ultimate consumer must be accompanied by records or invoice copies
indicating the name of the distributor who paid the inspection fee, the net
tons received, and the grade or brand name of the products received.
(d) (c) The annual tonnage report is
due must be submitted to the commissioner on or before the last day
of the month following the close of each reporting period July 31 of
each calendar year.
(e) (d) The inspection fee at the rate
stated in section 18C.425, subdivision 6, must accompany the statement.
Subd. 2. Additional
reports. The commissioner may by
rule require additional reports for the purpose of gathering statistical data
relating to fertilizer, soil amendments, and plant amendments distribution in
the state.
Subd. 3. Late annual
report and inspection fee penalty. (a) If a distributor does not file the
semiannual statement registrant or licensee fails to submit an annual
tonnage report or pay the inspection fees fee under section
18C.425, subdivision 6, by 31 days after the end of the reporting period
July 31, the commissioner shall assess the registrant or licensee a
penalty of the greater of $25 $50 or ten percent of the amount
due against the licensee or registrant.
(b) The fees due, plus the penalty,
may be recovered in a civil action against the licensee or registrant.
(c) The assessment of the penalty
does not prevent the commissioner from taking other actions as provided in this
chapter and sections 18D.301 to 18D.331.
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Subd. 4.
Responsibility for inspection
fees. If more than one person
is involved in the distribution of a fertilizer, soil amendment, or plant
amendment, the distributor who imports, manufactures, or produces the fertilizer
or who has the specialty fertilizer, soil amendment, or plant amendment
registered is responsible for the inspection fee on products produced or
brought into this state. The distributor
must separately list the inspection fee on the invoice to the licensee. The last licensee must retain the invoices
showing proof of inspection fees paid for three years and must pay the
inspection fee on products brought into this state before July 1, 1989, unless
the reporting and paying of fees have been made by a prior distributor of the
fertilizer.
Subd. 5. Verification
of statements annual tonnage report. The commissioner may verify the records on
which the statement of annual tonnage report is based.
Sec. 62. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18C.425,
subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Fee
for late application. If an
application for renewal of a fertilizer license or registration of a
specialty fertilizer, soil amendment, or plant amendment under section
18C.411 or a license under section 18C.415 is not filed before January 1
or July 1 of a year, as required submitted to the commissioner after
December 31, an additional application late fee of one-half
of the amount due must be paid in addition to the application fee before
the renewal license or registration may be issued.
Sec. 63. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18C.425,
subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Payment
of inspection fees fee.
(a) The person who registers and distributes in the state a specialty
fertilizer, soil amendment, or plant amendment under section 18C.411 shall pay
the inspection fee to the commissioner.
(b) The person licensed under section
18C.415 who distributes a fertilizer to a person not required to be so licensed
shall pay the inspection fee to the commissioner, except as exempted under
section 18C.421, subdivision 1, paragraph (b).
(c) The person responsible for payment of the inspection
fees for fertilizers, soil amendments, or plant amendments sold and used in
this state must pay an inspection fee of 30 70 cents per ton of
fertilizer, soil amendment, and plant amendment sold or distributed in this
state, with a minimum of $10 on all tonnage reports. Products sold or distributed to manufacturers
or exchanged between them are exempt from the inspection fee imposed by this
subdivision if the products are used exclusively for manufacturing purposes.
(d) A registrant or licensee must
retain invoices showing proof of fertilizer, plant amendment, or soil amendment
distribution amounts and inspection fees paid for a period of three years.
Sec. 64. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18E.03,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Expenditures. (a) Money in the agricultural chemical
response and reimbursement account may only be used:
(1) to pay for the commissioner's
responses to incidents under chapters 18B, 18C, and 18D that are not eligible
for payment under section 115B.20, subdivision 2;
(2) to pay for emergency responses
that are otherwise unable to be funded;
(3) to reimburse and pay corrective
action costs under section 18E.04; and
(4) by the board to reimburse
the commissioner for board staff and other administrative costs and
the commissioner's incident response program costs related to eligible
incident sites, up to $225,000 $450,000 per fiscal year.
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(b) Money in the agricultural chemical
response and reimbursement account is appropriated to the commissioner to make
payments as provided in this subdivision.
Sec. 65. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18E.03,
subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Fee. (a) The response and reimbursement fee
consists of the surcharges and any adjustments made by the commissioner in this
subdivision and shall be collected by the commissioner. The amount of the response and reimbursement
fee shall be determined and imposed annually by the commissioner as required to
satisfy the requirements in subdivision 3.
The commissioner shall adjust the amount of the surcharges imposed in
proportion to the amount of the surcharges listed in this subdivision. License application categories under
paragraph (d) must be charged in proportion to the amount of surcharges imposed
up to a maximum of 50 percent of the license fees set under chapters 18B and 18C.
(b) The commissioner shall impose a surcharge
on pesticides registered under chapter 18B to be collected as a surcharge on
the registration application fee gross sales under section
18B.26, subdivision 3, that is equal to 0.1 percent of sales of the pesticide
in the state and sales of pesticides for use in the state during the previous
calendar year, except the surcharge may not be imposed on pesticides that are
sanitizers or disinfectants as determined by the commissioner. No surcharge is required if the surcharge
amount based on percent of annual gross sales is less than $10. The registrant shall determine when and
which pesticides are sold or used in this state. The registrant shall secure sufficient sales
information of pesticides distributed into this state from distributors and
dealers, regardless of distributor location, to make a determination. Sales of pesticides in this state and sales
of pesticides for use in this state by out-of-state distributors are not exempt
and must be included in the registrant's annual report, as required under
section 18B.26, subdivision 3, paragraph (c), and fees shall be paid by the
registrant based upon those reported sales.
Sales of pesticides in the state for use outside of the state are
exempt from the surcharge in this paragraph if the registrant, agricultural
pesticide dealer, or pesticide dealer properly documents the sale location
and the distributors.
(c) The commissioner shall impose a
ten cents per ton surcharge on the inspection fee under section 18C.425,
subdivision 6, for fertilizers, soil amendments, and plant amendments.
(d) The commissioner shall impose a
surcharge on the license application of persons licensed under chapters 18B and
18C consisting of:
(1) a $75 surcharge for each site
where pesticides are stored or distributed, to be imposed as a surcharge on
pesticide dealer application fees under section 18B.31, subdivision 5, and
the agricultural pesticide dealer application fee under section 18B.316,
subdivision 10;
(2) a $75 surcharge for each site
where a fertilizer, plant amendment, or soil amendment is distributed, to be
imposed on persons licensed under sections 18C.415 and 18C.425;
(3) a $50 surcharge to be imposed on a
structural pest control applicator license application under section 18B.32,
subdivision 6, for business license applications only;
(4) a $20 surcharge to be imposed on
commercial applicator license application fees under section 18B.33,
subdivision 7; and
(5) a $20 surcharge to be imposed on
noncommercial applicator license application fees under section 18B.34,
subdivision 5, except a surcharge may not be imposed on a noncommercial
applicator that is a state agency, political subdivision of the state, the
federal government, or an agency of the federal government.
(e) A $1,000 fee shall be imposed on
each site where pesticides are stored and sold for use outside of the state
unless:
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(1) the distributor properly
documents that it has less than $2,000,000 per year in wholesale value of pesticides
stored and transferred through the site; or
(2) the registrant pays the surcharge
under paragraph (b) and the registration fee under section 18B.26, subdivision
3, for all of the pesticides stored at the site and sold for use outside of the
state.
(f) Paragraphs (c) to (e) apply to
sales, licenses issued, applications received for licenses, and inspection fees
imposed on or after July 1, 1990.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2009. However, the
commissioner of agriculture may not implement the change to paragraph (b) until
January 1, 2010.
Sec. 66. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18E.06, is
amended to read:
18E.06 REPORT.
By December 1 of each year, the
Agricultural Chemical Response Compensation Board and the commissioner shall
submit to the house of representatives Committee on Ways and Means, the senate
Committee on Finance, the house of representatives and senate committees with
jurisdiction over the environment, natural resources, and agriculture, and the
Environmental Quality Board a report detailing the board's activities
and reimbursements and the expenditures and activities associated with the
commissioner's incident response program for which money from the account
has been spent during the previous year.
Sec. 67. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18H.02,
subdivision 12a, is amended to read:
Subd. 12a. Individual
Dormant. "Individual"
means a human being "Dormant" means nursery stock without
etiolated growth.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective
the day following final enactment.
Sec. 68. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18H.02, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 12b.
Etiolated growth. "Etiolated growth" means
bleached and unnatural growth resulting from the exclusion of sunlight.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 69. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18H.02, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 12c.
Individual. "Individual" means a human
being.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 70. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18H.02, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 24a.
Packaged stock. "Packaged stock" means bare root
nursery stock packed with the roots in moisture-retaining material encased in
plastic film or other material designed to hold the moisture-retaining material
in place.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
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Sec. 71. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18H.07,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Nursery
stock grower certificate. (a) A
nursery stock grower must pay an annual fee based on the area of all acreage on
which nursery stock is grown for certification as follows:
(1) less than one-half acre, $150;
(2) from one-half acre to two acres,
$200;
(3) over two acres up to five acres,
$300;
(4) over five acres up to ten acres,
$350;
(5) over ten acres up to 20 acres,
$500;
(6) over 20 acres up to 40 acres,
$650;
(7) over 40 acres up to 50 acres,
$800;
(8) over 50 acres up to 200 acres,
$1,100;
(9) over 200 acres up to 500 acres,
$1,500; and
(10) over 500 acres, $1,500 plus $2
for each additional acre.
(b) In addition to the fees in
paragraph (a), a penalty of ten percent of the fee due must be charged for each
month, or portion thereof, that the fee is delinquent up to a maximum of 30
percent for any application for renewal not received by January 1
postmarked by December 31 of the current year following
expiration of a certificate.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 72. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18H.07,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Nursery
stock dealer certificate. (a) A
nursery stock dealer must pay an annual fee based on the dealer's gross sales of
certified nursery stock per location during the most recent certificate
year. A certificate applicant operating
for the first time must pay the minimum fee.
The fees per sales location are:
(1) gross sales up to $5,000, $150;
(2) gross sales over $5,000 up to
$20,000, $175;
(3) gross sales over $20,000 up to
$50,000, $300;
(4) gross sales over $50,000 up to
$75,000, $425;
(5) gross sales over $75,000 up to
$100,000, $550;
(6) gross sales over $100,000 up to
$200,000, $675; and
(7) gross sales over $200,000, $800.
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(b) In addition to the fees in
paragraph (a), a penalty of ten percent of the fee due must be charged for each
month, or portion thereof, that the fee is delinquent up to a maximum of 30
percent for any application for renewal not received by January 1
postmarked by December 31 of the current year following
expiration of a certificate.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 73. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18H.09, is
amended to read:
18H.09 NURSERY STOCK CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS.
(a) All nursery stock growing at
sites identified by nursery stock dealers or nursery stock growers and
submitted for inspection must be inspected by the commissioner within the
previous 12 months prior to sale and found apparently free from quarantine and
regulated nonquarantine pests as well as significantly dangerous or potentially
damaging plant pests. The commissioner
may waive a site inspection under the following conditions:
(1) the nursery stock is not going to
be sold within 12 months;
(2) the nursery stock will not be
moved out of Minnesota; and
(3) the nursery site or stock is not
subject to certification requirements associated with a state or federally
regulated or quarantined plant pest.
All nursery stock originating from
out of state and offered for sale in Minnesota must have been inspected by the
appropriate state or federal agency during the previous 12 months and found
free from quarantine and regulated nonquarantine pests as well as significantly
dangerous or potentially damaging plant pests.
A nursery stock certificate is valid from January 1 to December 31.
(b) Nursery stock must be accessible
to the commissioner for inspection during regular business hours. Weeds or other growth that hinder a proper
inspection are grounds to suspend or withhold a certificate or require a
reinspection.
(c) Inspection reports issued to
growers must contain a list of the plant pests found at the time of
inspection. Withdrawal-from-distribution
orders are considered part of the inspection reports. A withdrawal-from-distribution order must
contain a list of plants withdrawn from distribution and the location of the
plants.
(d) The commissioner may post signs
to delineate sections withdrawn from distribution. These signs must remain in place until the
commissioner removes them or grants written permission to the grower to remove
the signs.
(e) Inspection reports issued to
dealers must outline the violations involved and corrective actions to be taken
including withdrawal-from-distribution orders which would specify nursery stock
that could not be distributed from a certain area.
(f) Optional inspections of plants
may be conducted by the commissioner upon request by any persons desiring an
inspection. A fee as provided in section
18H.07 must be charged for such an inspection.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
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Sec. 74. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 18H.10, is
amended to read:
18H.10 STORAGE OF NURSERY STOCK.
All nursery stock must be kept and
displayed under conditions of temperature, light, and moisture sufficient to
maintain the viability and vigor of the nursery stock. Packaged dormant nursery stock must be
stored under conditions that retard growth, prevent etiolated growth, and
protect its viability.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 75. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 28A.085,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Violations;
prohibited acts. The commissioner
may charge a reinspection fee for each reinspection of a food handler that:
(1) is found with a major violation
of requirements in chapter 28, 29, 30, 31, 31A, 32, 33, or 34, or rules adopted
under one of those chapters;
(2) is found with a violation of
section 31.02, 31.161, or 31.165, and requires a follow-up inspection after an
administrative meeting held pursuant to section 31.14; or
(3) fails to correct equipment and
facility deficiencies as required in rules adopted under chapter 28, 29, 30,
31, 31A, 32, or 34. The first
reinspection of a firm with gross food sales under $1,000,000 must be assessed
at $75 $150. The fee for a
firm with gross food sales over $1,000,000 is $100 $200. The fee for a subsequent reinspection of a
firm for the same violation is 50 percent of their current license fee or $200
$300, whichever is greater. The
establishment must be issued written notice of violations with a reasonable
date for compliance listed on the notice.
An initial inspection relating to a complaint is not a reinspection.
Sec. 76. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 28A.21,
subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Duties. The task force shall:
(1) coordinate educational efforts
regarding food safety and defense;
(2) provide advice and coordination
to state agencies as requested by the agencies;
(3) serve as a source of information
and referral for the public, news media, and others concerned with food safety
and defense; and
(4) make recommendations to Congress,
the legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture finance and
policy, the legislature, and others about appropriate action to improve food
safety and defense in the state.
Sec. 77. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 31.94, is
amended to read:
31.94 COMMISSIONER DUTIES.
(a) In order to promote opportunities
for organic agriculture in Minnesota, the commissioner shall:
(1) survey producers and support
services and organizations to determine information and research needs in the
area of organic agriculture practices;
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(2) work with the University of Minnesota to
demonstrate the on-farm applicability of organic agriculture practices to
conditions in this state;
(3) direct the programs of the department so as to
work toward the promotion of organic agriculture in this state;
(4) inform agencies of how state or federal programs
could utilize and support organic agriculture practices; and
(5) work closely with producers, the University of
Minnesota, the Minnesota Trade Office, and other appropriate organizations to
identify opportunities and needs as well as ensure coordination and avoid
duplication of state agency efforts regarding research, teaching, marketing,
and extension work relating to organic agriculture.
(b) By November 15 of each even-numbered year the
commissioner, in conjunction with the task force created in paragraph (c),
shall report on the status of organic agriculture in Minnesota to the
legislative policy and finance committees and divisions with jurisdiction over
agriculture. The report must include:
(1) a description of current state or federal programs
directed toward organic agriculture, including significant results and
experiences of those programs;
(2) a description of specific actions the department
of agriculture is taking in the area of organic agriculture, including the
proportion of the department's budget spent on organic agriculture;
(3) a description of current and future research needs
at all levels in the area of organic agriculture;
(4) suggestions for changes in existing programs or
policies or enactment of new programs or policies that will affect organic
agriculture;
(5) a description of market trends and potential for
organic products;
(6) available information, using currently reliable
data, on the price received, yield, and profitability of organic farms, and a
comparison with data on conventional farms; and
(7) available information, using currently reliable
data, on the positive and negative impacts of organic production on the
environment and human health.
(c) The commissioner shall appoint A Minnesota
Organic Advisory Task Force to shall advise the commissioner
and the University of Minnesota on policies and practices to
programs that will improve organic agriculture in Minnesota, including
how available resources can most effectively be used for outreach, education,
research, and technical assistance that meet the needs of the organic
agriculture community. The task
force must consist of the following residents of the state:
(1) three farmers using organic agriculture methods;
(2) two organic food wholesalers, retailers, or
distributors of organic products;
(3) one representative of organic food
certification agencies;
(4) two organic food processors;
(5) one representative from the University
of Minnesota Extension Service;
(6) one representative from a University of
Minnesota postsecondary research institution faculty member;
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(7) one representative from a
nonprofit organization representing producers;
(8) one two at-large member
members;
(9) one representative from the United
States Department of Agriculture; and
(10) one organic consumer
representative.
The commissioner, in consultation
with the director of the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station; the dean
and director of University of Minnesota Extension; and the dean of the College
of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences shall appoint members to
serve staggered two-year terms.
Terms, Compensation, and removal of
members are governed by section 15.059, subdivision 6. The task force must meet at least twice each
year and expires on June 30, 2009 2013.
(d) For the purposes of expanding,
improving, and developing production and marketing of the organic products of
Minnesota agriculture, the commissioner may receive funds from state and
federal sources and spend them, including through grants or contracts, to
assist producers and processors to achieve certification, to conduct education
or marketing activities, to enter into research and development partnerships,
or to address production or marketing obstacles to the growth and well-being of
the industry.
(e) The commissioner may facilitate
the registration of state organic production and handling operations including
those exempt from organic certification according to Code of Federal
Regulations, title 7, section 205.101, and certification agents operating
within the state.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective June 30, 2009.
Sec. 78. [31.97]
FEEDING MINNESOTA TASK FORCE.
Subdivision 1.
Establishment; purpose. The commissioner of agriculture must
establish the Feeding Minnesota Task Force to study the consumption of
Minnesota grown produce and livestock by facilitating the donation of harvested
products to charities that provide food for hungry people.
Subd. 2.
Members. The commissioner must appoint task force
members as follows:
(1) one member representing a food
bank organization;
(2) two members representing food
producer and grower organizations;
(3) one member representing the
Minnesota Farmers Market Association;
(4) one member representing Minnesota
higher education institutions;
(5) one member representing the food
transportation industry;
(6) two members representing
statewide agricultural organizations; and
(7) one member representing food processors.
Subd. 3.
No compensation. Task force members may not be compensated
under section 15.059, subdivision 3.
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Subd. 4. Report. The commissioner must convene the task
force no later than January 31, 2010.
The commissioner must make policy recommendations to the chairs of the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture finance by November
1, 2010.
Subd. 5. Expiration. This section expires November 1, 2010.
Sec. 79.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 32.394, subdivision 8, is amended to
read:
Subd. 8. Grade A inspection fees. A processor or marketing organization of
milk, milk products, sheep milk, or goat milk who wishes to market Grade A milk
or use the Grade A label must apply for Grade A inspection service from the
commissioner. A pasteurization plant
requesting Grade A inspection service must hold a Grade A permit and pay an
annual inspection fee of no more than $500.
For Grade A farm inspection service, the fee must be no more than $50
per farm, paid annually by the processor or by the marketing organization on
behalf of its patrons. For a farm
requiring a reinspection in addition to the required biannual inspections, an
additional fee of $45 $100 per reinspection must be paid by the
processor or by the marketing organization on behalf of its patrons.
Sec. 80.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 41A.09, subdivision 2a, is amended to
read:
Subd. 2a. Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the terms
defined in this subdivision have the meanings given them.
(a) "Ethanol" means fermentation ethyl
alcohol derived from agricultural products, including potatoes, cereal grains,
cheese whey, and sugar beets; forest products; or other renewable resources,
including residue and waste generated from the production, processing, and
marketing of agricultural products, forest products, and other renewable
resources, that:
(1) meets all of the specifications in ASTM
specification D4806-04a; and
(2) is denatured as specified in Code of Federal
Regulations, title 27, parts 20 and 21.
(b) "Ethanol plant" means a plant at which
ethanol is produced.
(c) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of
agriculture.
(d) "Rural economic infrastructure" means
the development of activities that will enhance the value of agricultural crop
or livestock commodities or by-products or waste from farming operations
through new and improved value-added conversion processes and technologies, the
development of more timely and efficient infrastructure delivery systems, and
the enhancement of marketing opportunities. "Rural economic infrastructure"
also means land, buildings, structures, fixtures, and improvements located or
to be located in Minnesota and used or operated primarily for the processing or
the support of production of marketable products from agricultural commodities or
wind energy produced in Minnesota.
Sec. 81.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 41A.09, subdivision 3a, is amended to
read:
Subd. 3a. Ethanol producer payments. (a) The commissioner shall make cash payments
to producers of ethanol located in the state that have begun production at a
specific location by June 30, 2000. For
the purpose of this subdivision, an entity that holds a controlling interest in
more than one ethanol plant is considered a single producer. The amount of the payment for each producer's
annual production, except as provided in paragraph (c), is 20 cents per gallon
for each gallon of ethanol produced at a specific location on or before June
30, 2000, or ten years after the start of production, whichever is later. Annually, within 90 days of the end of its
fiscal year, an ethanol producer receiving payments under this subdivision must
file a disclosure statement on a form provided by the
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commissioner.
The initial disclosure statement must include a summary description of
the organization of the business structure of the claimant, a listing of the
percentages of ownership by any person or other entity with an ownership
interest of five percent or greater, and a copy of its annual audited financial
statements, including the auditor's report and footnotes. The disclosure statement must include
information demonstrating what percentage of the entity receiving payments
under this section is owned by farmers or other entities eligible to farm or
own agricultural land in Minnesota under the provisions of section 500.24. Subsequent annual reports must reflect noncumulative
changes in ownership of ten percent or more of the entity. The report need not disclose the identity of
the persons or entities eligible to farm or own agricultural land with
ownership interests, individuals residing within 30 miles of the plant, or of
any other entity with less than ten percent ownership interest, but the
claimant must retain information within its files confirming the accuracy of
the data provided. This data must be
made available to the commissioner upon request. Not later than the 15th day of February in
each year the commissioner shall deliver to the chairs of the standing
committees of the senate and the house of representatives that deal with
agricultural policy and agricultural finance issues an annual report
summarizing aggregated data from plants receiving payments under this section
during the preceding calendar year.
Audited financial statements and notes and disclosure statements
submitted to the commissioner are nonpublic data under section 13.02,
subdivision 9. Notwithstanding the
provisions of chapter 13 relating to nonpublic data, summaries of the submitted
audited financial reports and notes and disclosure statements will be contained
in the report to the committee chairs and will be public data.
(b) No payments shall be made for
ethanol production that occurs after June 30, 2010. A producer of ethanol shall not transfer the
producer's eligibility for payments under this section to an ethanol plant at a
different location.
(c) If the level of production at an
ethanol plant increases due to an increase in the production capacity of the
plant, the payment under paragraph (a) applies to the additional increment of
production until ten years after the increased production began. Once a plant's production capacity reaches
15,000,000 gallons per year, no additional increment will qualify for the
payment.
(d) Total payments under paragraphs
(a) and (c) to a producer in a fiscal year may not exceed $3,000,000.
(e) By the last day of October, January,
April, and July, each producer shall file a claim for payment for ethanol
production during the preceding three calendar months. A producer that files a claim under this
subdivision shall include a statement of the producer's total ethanol production
in Minnesota during the quarter covered by the claim. For each claim and statement of total ethanol
production filed under this subdivision, the volume of ethanol production must
be examined by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with
standards established by the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants.
(f) Payments shall be made November
15, February 15, May 15, and August 15.
A separate payment shall be made for each claim filed. Except as provided in paragraph (g), the
total quarterly payment to a producer under this paragraph may not exceed
$750,000.
(g) Notwithstanding the quarterly
payment limits of paragraph (f), the commissioner shall make an additional
payment in the fourth quarter of each fiscal year to ethanol producers for the
lesser of: (1) 20 cents per gallon of production in the fourth quarter of the
year that is greater than 3,750,000 gallons; or (2) the total amount of
payments lost during the first three quarters of the fiscal year due to plant
outages, repair, or major maintenance.
Total payments to an ethanol producer in a fiscal year, including any
payment under this paragraph, must not exceed the total amount the
producer is eligible to receive based on the producer's approved production
capacity. The provisions of this paragraph apply only to production losses
that occur in quarters beginning after December 31, 1999.
Journal of the
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(h) The commissioner shall reimburse
ethanol producers for any deficiency in payments during earlier quarters if the
deficiency occurred because of unallotment or because appropriated money was
insufficient to make timely payments in the full amount provided in paragraph
(a). Notwithstanding the quarterly or
annual payment limitations in this subdivision, the commissioner shall begin
making payments for earlier deficiencies in each fiscal year that
appropriations for ethanol payments exceed the amount required to make eligible
scheduled payments. Payments for earlier
deficiencies must continue until the deficiencies for each producer are paid in
full, except the commissioner shall not make a deficiency payment to an entity
that no longer produces ethanol on a commercial scale at the location for which
the entity qualified for producer payments, or to an assignee of the entity.
(i) The commissioner may make
direct payments to producers of rural economic infrastructure provide
financial assistance under the 21st century agricultural reinvestment program
in section 41A.12 with any amount of the annual appropriation for ethanol
producer payments and rural economic infrastructure that is in excess of
the amount required to make scheduled ethanol producer payments and deficiency
payments under paragraphs (a) to (h).
Sec. 82. [41A.12]
21ST CENTURY AGRICULTURAL REINVESTMENT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1.
Establishment. The 21st century agricultural reinvestment
program is established in order to promote the advancement of the state's
agricultural and renewable energy industries.
Subd. 2.
Activities authorized. For the purposes of this program, the
commissioner may issue grants, loans, or other forms of financial
assistance. Eligible activities include,
but are not limited to, grants to livestock producers under the livestock
investment grant program under section 17.118 and bioenergy awards made by the
NextGen Energy Board under section 41A.105.
Subd. 3.
Oversight. The commissioner, in consultation with the
chairs and ranking minority members of the house of representatives and senate
committees with jurisdiction over agriculture finance, must allocate available
funds among eligible uses, develop competitive eligibility criteria, and award
funds on a needs basis.
Sec. 83. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 41B.039,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. State
participation. The state may
participate in a new real estate loan with an eligible lender to a beginning
farmer to the extent of 45 percent of the principal amount of the loan or $200,000
$300,000, whichever is less. The
interest rates and repayment terms of the authority's participation interest
may be different than the interest rates and repayment terms of the lender's
retained portion of the loan.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 84. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 41B.04,
subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. State's
State participation. With
respect to loans that are eligible for restructuring under sections 41B.01 to
41B.23 and upon acceptance by the authority, the authority shall enter into a
participation agreement or other financial arrangement whereby it shall
participate in a restructured loan to the extent of 45 percent of the primary
principal or $225,000 $400,000, whichever is less. The authority's portion of the loan must be
protected during the authority's participation by the first mortgage held by
the eligible lender to the extent of its participation in the loan.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
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Sec. 85. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 41B.042,
subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Participation
limit; interest. The authority may
participate in new seller-sponsored loans to the extent of 45 percent of the
principal amount of the loan or $200,000 $300,000, whichever is
less. The interest rates and repayment
terms of the authority's participation interest may be different than the
interest rates and repayment terms of the seller's retained portion of the
loan.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 86. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 41B.043,
subdivision 1b, is amended to read:
Subd. 1b. Loan
participation. The authority may participate
in an agricultural improvement loan with an eligible lender to a farmer who
meets the requirements of section 41B.03, subdivision 1, clauses (1) and (2),
and who is actively engaged in farming.
Participation is limited to 45 percent of the principal amount of the
loan or $200,000 $300,000, whichever is less. The interest rates and repayment terms of the
authority's participation interest may be different than the interest rates and
repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the loan.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 87. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 41B.045,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Loan
participation. The authority may
participate in a livestock expansion loan with an eligible lender to a
livestock farmer who meets the requirements of section 41B.03, subdivision 1,
clauses (1) and (2), and who are actively engaged in a livestock
operation. A prospective borrower must have
a total net worth, including assets and liabilities of the borrower's spouse
and dependents, of less than $660,000 in 2004 and an amount in subsequent years
which is adjusted for inflation by multiplying that amount by the cumulative
inflation rate as determined by the United States All-Items Consumer Price
Index.
Participation is limited to 45 percent
of the principal amount of the loan or $275,000 $400,000,
whichever is less. The interest rates
and repayment terms of the authority's participation interest may be different
from the interest rates and repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of
the loan.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 88. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 97A.045,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Duties;
generally. (a) The
commissioner shall do all things the commissioner determines are necessary to
preserve, protect, and propagate desirable species of wild animals. The commissioner shall make special
provisions for the management of fish and wildlife to ensure recreational
opportunities for anglers and hunters.
The commissioner shall acquire wild animals for breeding or stocking and
may dispose of or destroy undesirable or predatory wild animals and their dens,
nests, houses, or dams.
(b) Notwithstanding chapters 17 and
35, the commissioner, in consultation with the commissioner of agriculture and
the executive director of the Board of Animal Health, may capture or control
nonnative or domestic animals that are released, have escaped, or are otherwise
running at large and causing damage to natural resources or agricultural lands,
or that are posing a threat to wildlife, domestic animals, or human
health. The commissioner may work with
other agencies to assist in the capture or control and may authorize persons to
take such animals.
Sec. 89. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 239.791,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Minimum
ethanol content required. (a) Except
as provided in subdivisions 10 to 14, a person responsible for the product
shall ensure that all gasoline sold or offered for sale in Minnesota must
contain at least the quantity of ethanol required by clause (1) or (2),
whichever is greater:
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2828
(1) 10.0
percent denatured ethanol by volume; or
(2) the maximum percent of denatured ethanol by volume
authorized in a waiver granted by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency under section 211(f)(4) of the Clean Air Act, United States Code, title
42, section 7545, subsection (f), paragraph (4).
(b) For purposes of enforcing the minimum ethanol
requirement of paragraph (a), a gasoline/ethanol blend will be construed to be
in compliance if the ethanol content, exclusive of denaturants and permitted
contaminants, comprises not less than 9.2 percent by volume and not more than
10.0 percent by volume of the blend as determined by an appropriate United
States Environmental Protection Agency or American Society of Testing Materials
standard method of analysis of alcohol/ether content in engine fuels.
(c) The provisions of this subdivision are suspended
during any period of time that subdivision 1a, paragraph (a), is in effect.
Sec. 90.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 239.791, subdivision 1a, is amended to
read:
Subd. 1a. Minimum ethanol content required. (a) Except as provided in subdivisions 10 to
14, on August 30, 2013, and thereafter, a person responsible for the product
shall ensure that all gasoline sold or offered for sale in Minnesota must
contain at least the quantity of ethanol required by clause (1) or (2),
whichever is greater:
(1) 20
percent denatured ethanol by volume; or
(2) the maximum percent of denatured ethanol by volume
authorized in a waiver granted by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency under section 211(f)(4) of the Clean Air Act, United States Code, title
42, section 7545, subsection (f), paragraph (4).
(b) For purposes of enforcing the minimum ethanol
requirement of paragraph (a), a gasoline/ethanol blend will be construed to be
in compliance if the ethanol content, exclusive of denaturants and permitted
contaminants, comprises not less than 18.4 percent by volume and not more than
20 percent by volume of the blend as determined by an appropriate United States
Environmental Protection Agency or American Society of Testing Materials
standard method of analysis of alcohol content in motor fuels.
(c) No motor fuel shall be deemed to be a defective
product by virtue of the fact that the motor fuel is formulated or blended
pursuant to the requirements of paragraph (a) under any theory of liability
except for simple or willful negligence or fraud. This paragraph does not preclude an action
for negligent, fraudulent, or willful acts.
This paragraph does not affect a person whose liability arises under
chapter 115, water pollution control; 115A, waste management; 115B, environmental
response and liability; 115C, leaking underground storage tanks; or 299J,
pipeline safety; under public nuisance law for damage to the environment or the
public health; under any other environmental or public health law; or under any
environmental or public health ordinance or program of a municipality as
defined in section 466.01.
(d) This subdivision expires on December 31, 2010, if
by that date:
(1) the commissioner of agriculture certifies and
publishes the certification in the State Register that at least 20 percent of
the volume of gasoline sold in the state is denatured ethanol; or
(2) federal approval has not been granted for the use
of E20 as gasoline. The United States
Environmental Protection Agency's failure to act on an application shall not be
deemed approval of the use of E20, or a waiver under section 211(f)(4) of
the Clean Air Act, United States Code, title 42, section 7545, subsection (f),
paragraph (4).
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2829
Sec. 91.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 336.9-601, is amended to read:
336.9-601
RIGHTS AFTER DEFAULT; JUDICIAL ENFORCEMENT; CONSIGNOR OR BUYER OF ACCOUNTS,
CHATTEL PAPER, PAYMENT INTANGIBLES, OR PROMISSORY NOTES.
(a) Rights of
secured party after default. After
default, a secured party has the rights provided in this part and, except as
otherwise provided in section 336.9-602, those provided by agreement of the parties. A secured party:
(1) may reduce a claim to judgment, foreclose, or
otherwise enforce the claim, security interest, or agricultural lien by any
available judicial procedure; and
(2) if the collateral is documents, may proceed either
as to the documents or as to the goods they cover.
(b) Rights and
duties of secured party in possession or control. A secured party in possession of
collateral or control of collateral under section 336.7-106, 336.9-104,
336.9-105, 336.9-106, or 336.9-107 has the rights and duties provided in
section 336.9-207.
(c) Rights
cumulative; simultaneous exercise. The
rights under subsections (a) and (b) are cumulative and may be exercised
simultaneously.
(d) Rights of
debtor and obligor. Except as
otherwise provided in subsection (g) and section 336.9-605, after default, a
debtor and an obligor have the rights provided in this part and by agreement of
the parties.
(e) Lien of
levy after judgment. If a secured
party has reduced its claim to judgment, the lien of any levy that may be made
upon the collateral by virtue of an execution based upon the judgment relates
back to the earliest of:
(1) the date of perfection of the security interest or
agricultural lien in the collateral;
(2) the date of filing a financing statement covering
the collateral; or
(3) any date specified in a statute under which the
agricultural lien was created.
(f) Execution
sale. A sale pursuant to an
execution is a foreclosure of the security interest or agricultural lien by
judicial procedure within the meaning of this section. A secured party may purchase at the sale and
thereafter hold the collateral free of any other requirements of this article.
(g) Consignor
or buyer of certain rights to payment. Except
as otherwise provided in section 336.9-607(c), this part imposes no duties upon
a secured party that is a consignor or is a buyer of accounts, chattel paper,
payment intangibles, or promissory notes.
(h) Security
interest in collateral that is agricultural property; enforcement. A person may not begin to enforce a
security interest in collateral that is agricultural property subject to
sections 583.20 to 583.32 that has secured a debt of more than $5,000
unless: a mediation notice under subsection
(i) is served on the debtor after a condition of default has occurred in the
security agreement and a copy served on the director of the agricultural
extension service; and the debtor and creditor have completed mediation under
sections 583.20 to 583.32; or as otherwise allowed under sections 583.20 to
583.32.
(i) Mediation
notice. A mediation notice under
subsection (h) must contain the following notice with the blanks properly
filled in.
"TO: ...(Name of Debtor)...
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YOU HAVE DEFAULTED ON THE ...(Debt in
Default)... SECURED BY AGRICULTURAL
PROPERTY DESCRIBED AS ...(Reasonable Description of Agricultural Property
Collateral).... THE AMOUNT OF
THE OUTSTANDING DEBT IS ...(Amount of Debt)...
AS A SECURED PARTY, ...(Name of
Secured Party)... INTENDS TO ENFORCE THE
SECURITY AGREEMENT AGAINST THE AGRICULTURAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED ABOVE BY
REPOSSESSING, FORECLOSING ON, OR OBTAINING A COURT JUDGMENT AGAINST THE
PROPERTY.
YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO HAVE THE DEBT
REVIEWED FOR MEDIATION. IF YOU REQUEST
MEDIATION, A DEBT THAT IS IN DEFAULT WILL BE MEDIATED ONLY ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT REQUEST MEDIATION, THIS DEBT
WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO FUTURE MEDIATION IF THE SECURED PARTY ENFORCES THE DEBT.
IF YOU PARTICIPATE IN MEDIATION, THE
DIRECTOR OF THE AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE WILL PROVIDE AN ORIENTATION
MEETING AND A FINANCIAL ANALYST TO HELP YOU TO PREPARE FINANCIAL INFORMATION. IF YOU DECIDE TO PARTICIPATE IN MEDIATION, IT
WILL BE TO YOUR ADVANTAGE TO ASSEMBLE YOUR FARM FINANCE AND OPERATION RECORDS
AND TO CONTACT A COUNTY EXTENSION OFFICE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. MEDIATION WILL ATTEMPT TO ARRIVE AT AN
AGREEMENT FOR HANDLING FUTURE FINANCIAL RELATIONS.
TO HAVE THE DEBT REVIEWED FOR
MEDIATION YOU MUST FILE A MEDIATION REQUEST WITH THE DIRECTOR WITHIN 14 DAYS
AFTER YOU RECEIVE THIS NOTICE. THE
MEDIATION REQUEST FORM IS AVAILABLE AT ANY COUNTY RECORDER'S OR COUNTY EXTENSION
OFFICE.
FROM: ...(Name and Address of Secured
Party)..."
Sec. 92. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 343.11, is
amended to read:
343.11 ACQUISITION OF PROPERTY, APPROPRIATIONS.
Every county and district society for
the prevention of cruelty to animals may acquire, by purchase, gift, grant, or
devise, and hold, use, or convey, real estate and personal property, and lease,
mortgage, sell, or use the same in any manner conducive to its interest, to the
same extent as natural persons. The
county board of any county, or the council of any city, in which such societies
exist, may, in its discretion, appropriate for the maintenance and support of
such societies in the transaction of the work for which they are organized, any
sums of money not otherwise appropriated, not to exceed in any one year the
sum of $4,800 or the sum of $1 per capita based upon the county's or city's
population as of the most recent federal census, whichever is greater;
provided, that no part of the appropriation shall be expended for the payment
of the salary of any officer of the society.
Sec. 93. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 550.365,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Contents. A mediation notice must contain the following
notice with the blanks properly filled in.
"TO: ....(Name of Judgment
Debtor)....
A JUDGMENT WAS ORDERED AGAINST YOU BY
....(Name of Court).... ON ....(Date of
Judgment).
AS A JUDGMENT CREDITOR, ....(Name of
Judgment Creditor).... INTENDS TO TAKE
ACTION AGAINST THE AGRICULTURAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED AS ....(Description of
Agricultural Property).... TO SATISFY
THE JUDGMENT IN THE AMOUNT OF ....(Amount of Debt)....
Journal of the
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YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO HAVE THE DEBT
REVIEWED FOR MEDIATION. IF YOU REQUEST
MEDIATION, A DEBT THAT IS IN DEFAULT WILL BE MEDIATED ONLY ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT REQUEST MEDIATION, THIS DEBT WILL
NOT BE SUBJECT TO FUTURE MEDIATION IF THE SECURED PARTY ENFORCES THE DEBT.
IF YOU PARTICIPATE IN MEDIATION, THE
DIRECTOR OF THE AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE WILL PROVIDE AN ORIENTATION
MEETING AND A FINANCIAL ANALYST TO HELP YOU PREPARE FINANCIAL INFORMATION. IF YOU DECIDE TO PARTICIPATE IN MEDIATION, IT
WILL BE TO YOUR ADVANTAGE TO ASSEMBLE YOUR FARM FINANCE AND OPERATION RECORDS
AND TO CONTACT A COUNTY EXTENSION OFFICE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. MEDIATION WILL ATTEMPT TO ARRIVE AT AN
AGREEMENT FOR HANDLING FUTURE FINANCIAL RELATIONS.
TO HAVE THE DEBT REVIEWED FOR
MEDIATION YOU MUST FILE A MEDIATION REQUEST WITH THE DIRECTOR WITHIN 14 DAYS
AFTER YOU RECEIVE THIS NOTICE. THE
MEDIATION REQUEST FORM IS AVAILABLE AT ANY COUNTY RECORDER'S OR COUNTY EXTENSION
OFFICE.
FROM: ....(Name and Address of
Judgment Creditor)...."
Sec. 94. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 559.209,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Contents. A mediation notice must contain the following
notice with the blanks properly filled in.
"TO: ....(Name of Contract for
Deed Purchaser)....
YOU HAVE DEFAULTED ON THE CONTRACT
FOR DEED OF THE AGRICULTURAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED AS ....(Size and Reasonable
Location of Property, Not Legal Description)..... THE AMOUNT OF THE OUTSTANDING DEBT IS
....(Amount of Debt)....
AS THE CONTRACT FOR DEED VENDOR,
....(Contract for Deed Vendor)....
INTENDS TO TERMINATE THE CONTRACT AND TAKE BACK THE PROPERTY.
YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO HAVE THE
CONTRACT FOR DEED DEBT REVIEWED FOR MEDIATION.
IF YOU REQUEST MEDIATION, A DEBT THAT IS IN DEFAULT WILL BE MEDIATED
ONLY ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT REQUEST
MEDIATION, THIS DEBT WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO FUTURE MEDIATION IF THE CONTRACT
FOR DEED VENDOR BEGINS REMEDIES TO ENFORCE THE DEBT.
IF YOU PARTICIPATE IN MEDIATION, THE
DIRECTOR OF THE AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE WILL PROVIDE AN ORIENTATION
MEETING AND A FINANCIAL ANALYST TO HELP YOU PREPARE FINANCIAL INFORMATION. IF YOU DECIDE TO PARTICIPATE IN MEDIATION, IT
WILL BE TO YOUR ADVANTAGE TO ASSEMBLE YOUR FARM FINANCE AND OPERATION RECORDS
AND TO CONTACT A COUNTY EXTENSION OFFICE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. MEDIATION WILL ATTEMPT TO ARRIVE AT AN
AGREEMENT FOR HANDLING FUTURE FINANCIAL RELATIONS.
TO HAVE THE CONTRACT FOR DEED DEBT
REVIEWED FOR MEDIATION YOU MUST FILE A MEDIATION REQUEST WITH THE DIRECTOR
WITHIN 14 DAYS AFTER YOU RECEIVE THE NOTICE.
THE MEDIATION REQUEST FORM IS AVAILABLE AT ANY COUNTY EXTENSION OFFICE.
FROM: ....(Name and Address of
Contract for Deed Vendor)...."
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Sec. 95. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 582.039,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Contents. A mediation notice must contain the following
notice with the blanks properly filled in.
"TO: ....(Name of Record
Owner)....
YOU HAVE DEFAULTED ON THE MORTGAGE OF
THE AGRICULTURAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED AS ....(Size and Reasonable Location, Not
Legal Description)..... THE
AMOUNT OF THE OUTSTANDING DEBT ON THIS PROPERTY IS ....(Amount of Debt)....
AS HOLDER OF THE MORTGAGE, ....(Name
of Holder of Mortgage).... INTENDS TO
FORECLOSE ON THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED ABOVE.
YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO HAVE THE
MORTGAGE DEBT REVIEWED FOR MEDIATION. IF
YOU REQUEST MEDIATION, A DEBT THAT IS IN DEFAULT WILL BE MEDIATED ONLY
ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT REQUEST MEDIATION,
THIS DEBT WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO FUTURE MEDIATION IF THE SECURED PARTY ENFORCES
THE DEBT.
IF YOU PARTICIPATE IN MEDIATION, THE
DIRECTOR OF THE AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE WILL PROVIDE AN ORIENTATION
MEETING AND A FINANCIAL ANALYST TO HELP YOU PREPARE FINANCIAL INFORMATION. IF YOU DECIDE TO PARTICIPATE IN MEDIATION, IT
WILL BE TO YOUR ADVANTAGE TO ASSEMBLE YOUR FARM FINANCE AND OPERATION RECORDS
AND TO CONTACT A COUNTY EXTENSION OFFICE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. MEDIATION WILL ATTEMPT TO ARRIVE AT AN
AGREEMENT FOR HANDLING FUTURE FINANCIAL RELATIONS.
TO HAVE THE MORTGAGE DEBT REVIEWED
FOR MEDIATION YOU MUST FILE A MEDIATION REQUEST WITH THE DIRECTOR WITHIN 14 DAYS
AFTER YOU RECEIVE THIS NOTICE. THE
MEDIATION REQUEST FORM IS AVAILABLE AT ANY COUNTY RECORDER'S OR COUNTY
EXTENSION OFFICE.
FROM: ....(Name and Address of Holder
of Mortgage)...."
Sec. 96. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 583.215, is
amended to read:
583.215 EXPIRATION.
(a) Sections 336.9-601, subsections (h) and (i); 550.365;
559.209; 582.039; and 583.20 to 583.32, expire June 30, 2009 2013.
(b) Laws 1986, chapter 398, article
1, section 18, as amended, is repealed.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 97. HUMAN
RESOURCES.
For fiscal years 2010 and 2011, the
Department of Agriculture, Board of Animal Health, and Agricultural Utilization
Research Institute may not use funds appropriated in sections 1 to 5 or
statutorily appropriated from the agricultural fund to directly or indirectly
pay for the services of staff in the Office of the Governor.
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2833
Sec. 98. BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL ASSESSMENT;
TEMPORARY ASSESSMENT; APPROPRIATION.
(a) From January 1, 2009, to December 31, 2009, a
person who purchases cattle that were raised or fed within this state shall
collect a bovine tuberculosis control assessment of $1 per head from the seller
and shall submit all assessments collected to the commissioner of agriculture
at least once every 30 days. If cattle that
were raised or fed within this state are sold outside of the state and the
assessment is not collected by the purchaser, the seller is responsible for
submitting the assessment to the commissioner.
For the purposes of this section, "a person who purchases cattle
that were raised or fed within this state" includes the first purchaser,
as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 17.53, subdivision 8, paragraph (a),
and any subsequent purchaser of the living animal.
(b) Money collected under this section shall be
deposited in an account in the special revenue fund and is appropriated to the
Board of Animal Health for bovine tuberculosis control activities.
(c) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), a person may not
collect a bovine tuberculosis control assessment from a person whose cattle
operation is located within a modified accredited zone established under
Minnesota Statutes, section 35.244, unless the cattle owner voluntarily pays
the assessment. The commissioner of
agriculture shall publish and make available a list of cattle producers exempt
under this paragraph.
(d) This section may be enforced under Minnesota
Statutes, sections 17.982 to 17.984.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective the day
following final enactment and applies retroactively to cattle purchased on or
after January 1, 2009.
Sec. 99. BIOFUEL STUDY; REPORT.
The commissioner of agriculture must study the
economic and technological feasibility of producing ethanol from whey. No later than May 1, 2010, the commissioner
of agriculture must report findings to the legislative committees with
jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance.
Sec. 100. GREEN JOBS FOOD PRODUCTION STUDY;
REPORT.
The Board of the Agricultural Utilization Research
Institute must prepare a detailed study of this state's food production sector
in coordination with the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities; urban,
rural, and tribal community-based agriculture and food security organizations;
members of the legislature with service on committees created by the Green Jobs
Task Force; and other interested stakeholders.
The study must define the size of the employment base and identify
opportunities to increase the number of green jobs in each of the following
sector segments: organics and organic
value-added processing and local, conventional, natural, traditional, and urban
farming. No later than January 15, 2010,
the Board of the Agricultural Utilization Research Institute must report its
findings to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over employment and
economic development policy or finance or agriculture finance.
Sec. 101. PILOT FOOD PROJECTS; REPORT.
The commissioner of agriculture must solicit proposals
and fund farm-to-school or farm-to-home pilot projects that encourage healthy
eating for children, foster farm-to-consumer connections, and strengthen local
economies. The commissioner must develop
selection criteria in consultation with the chairs of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over agriculture finance and a representative of
the University of Minnesota's farm-to-school project. The commissioner must select one project from
each of the following areas of the state:
a rural area, a tribal area, an urban core area, and a suburban
area. No later than January 15, 2010,
the commissioner must provide a program report and recommendations to the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture policy or finance.
Journal of the
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Sec. 102. FEDERAL
STIMULUS FUNDING.
The commissioner of agriculture must
apply for funding available to the state through the federal American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Public Law 111-5, for areas under the purview of
the commissioner including but not limited to agriculture and rural
development, bioenergy, food safety, farm-to-school and related nutrition
programs, and the development of local and regional food systems.
Sec. 103. REPORT
ON MINNESOTA PROCESSED FOODS LABELING.
(a) The commissioner of agriculture
must consult with Minnesota food processors and retailers regarding the
development of labeling that identifies food products processed in this
state. The commissioner must consult with
interested parties including, but not limited to, the following organizations:
(1) at least four food processor
industry representatives who represent different business sizes and product
categories;
(2) at least two food retailers of
which at least one must have retail store locations located outside of the Twin
Cities metropolitan area;
(3) two representatives of the
Department of Agriculture, one who works with the Minnesota grown program and
one who works with the processed foods program;
(4) one representative of the
Agricultural Utilization Research Institute; and
(5) two representatives of statewide
agricultural producer groups.
(b) No later than March 31, 2010, the
commissioner must report findings and recommendations to the legislative committees
with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance. The report should include an assessment of
the level of food processor interest in developing a trademarked logo or
labeling statement as well as recommendations regarding program funding options,
product eligibility criteria, and coordination with existing labeling and
promotion programs and resources.
Sec. 104. FERAL
SWINE REPORT.
The commissioner of natural resources,
in coordination with the commissioner of agriculture and the executive director
of the Board of Animal Health, must develop a report and recommend any
necessary changes to state policies, authorities, and penalties related to
feral swine and other nonnative or domestic animals released, that have
escaped, or that are otherwise running at large. The agencies must consult with interested
stakeholders. No later than January 15,
2010, the commissioner of natural resources must submit the report to the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over natural resources or agriculture
policy or finance.
Sec. 105. DEADLINE
FOR APPOINTMENTS.
The commissioner of agriculture must
complete the appointments required under Minnesota Statutes, section 18.91, by
September 1, 2009. The commissioner or
the commissioner's designee shall convene the first meeting of the committee no
later than October 1, 2009.
Sec. 106. APPROPRIATION
MODIFICATION.
(a) Notwithstanding Minnesota
Statutes, section 35.085, the Board of Animal Health may make onetime grants to
certain beef cattle producers participating in the bovine tuberculosis herd
buyout authorized in Minnesota Statutes, section 35.086, from the $100,000
appropriation for reimbursements in Laws 2007, chapter 45, article 1, section
4.
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(b) A buyout participant is eligible
for payment under this section if the Board of Animal Health quarantined the
participant's herd and required the participant to sell young cattle at
slaughter rather than as feeder cattle.
(c) For each head of cattle sold at
slaughter under paragraph (b), the Board of Animal Health must pay the
difference between the fair market feeder cattle value at the time of sale, as
determined by the Board of Animal Health, and the documented slaughter price
received by the participant.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 107. UNUSED
OFFICE SPACE.
The commissioner of agriculture, in
consultation with the commissioner of administration, must actively seek
tenants to rent vacant or unused space in the Freeman Building. The commissioner of agriculture must notify
entities that receive state funding of the amount and type of space available,
the rental rate, and other lease terms.
No later than February 1, 2011, the commissioner of agriculture must
report actions taken and outcomes achieved under this section to the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture finance.
Sec. 108. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections
17.49, subdivision 3; 18G.12, subdivision 5; 38.02, subdivisions 3 and 4;
41.51; 41.52; 41.53; 41.55; 41.56; 41.57; 41.58, subdivisions 1 and 2; 41.59,
subdivision 1; 41.60; 41.61, subdivision 1; 41.62; 41.63; and 41.65, and
Minnesota Rules, part 1505.0820, are repealed.
ARTICLE 2
RURAL FINANCE AUTHORITY
Section 1. RURAL
FINANCE AUTHORITY; APPROPRIATION.
Subdivision 1.
Appropriation. $35,000,000 is appropriated from the bond
proceeds fund to the commissioner of agriculture, as chair of the Board of the
Rural Finance Authority, to purchase participation interests in or to make
direct agricultural loans to farmers under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 41B, as
authorized by the Minnesota Constitution, article XI, section 5, clause
(h). This appropriation is for the
beginning farmer program under Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.039; the loan
restructuring program under Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.04; the
seller-sponsored program under Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.042; the
agricultural improvement loan program under Minnesota Statutes, section
41B.043; and the livestock expansion loan program under Minnesota Statutes,
section 41B.045. All debt service on
bond proceeds used to finance this appropriation must be repaid by the Rural
Finance Authority under Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.643. Loan participations must be priced to provide
full interest and principal coverage and a reserve for potential losses. Priority for loans must be given first, to
basic beginning farmer loans; second, to seller-sponsored loans; and third, to
agricultural improvement loans.
Subd. 2.
Bond sale. To provide the money appropriated in this
section from the bond proceeds fund, the commissioner of finance shall sell and
issue bonds of the state in an amount up to $35,000,000 in the manner, upon the
terms, and with the effect prescribed by Minnesota Statutes, sections 16A.631
to 16A.675, and by the Minnesota Constitution, article XI, sections 4 to 7.
Subd. 3.
Notice. If the appropriations in this section are
enacted more than once in the 2009 regular legislative session, these
appropriations must be given effect only once.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective
the day following final enactment.
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ARTICLE 3
VETERANS AFFAIRS
Section 1.
VETERANS AFFAIRS.
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and for the
purposes specified in this article. The
appropriations are from the general fund and are available for the fiscal years
indicated for each purpose. The figures
"2010" and "2011" used in this article mean that the
appropriations listed under them are available for the fiscal year ending June
30, 2010, or June 30, 2011, respectively. "The first year" is fiscal
year 2010. "The second year" is fiscal year 2011. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2010 and 2011.
APPROPRIATIONS
Available for the Year
Ending June 30
2010 2011
Sec.
2. VETERANS
AFFAIRS
Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation $59,127,000 $58,192,000
Subd.
2. Veterans Services 15,716,000 15,716,000
Of this amount, $500,000 in fiscal
year 2010 and $500,000 in fiscal year 2011 are to be used to continue working
on the merger of the Department of Veterans Affairs computer system and the
former Veterans Homes Board computer system.
Minnesota GI Bill. $1,450,000 each
year is for the Minnesota GI Bill program in Minnesota Statutes, section
197.791. Of this amount, $100,000 each
year must be transferred to the Office of Higher Education for use in
administering the GI Bill program.
Veterans Service Organization Grants. $353,000 each year is for grants to the following
congressionally chartered veterans service organizations, as designated by the
commissioner: Disabled American Veterans,
Military Order of the Purple Heart, the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign
Wars, Vietnam Veterans of America, AMVETS, and Paralyzed Veterans of
America. This funding must be allocated
in direct proportion to the funding currently being provided by the
commissioner to these organizations.
Homeless Veterans. $350,000 each year
is in addition to the base and is a onetime appropriation for a grant to the
Minnesota Assistance Council for Veterans (MACV) to provide assistance
throughout Minnesota to veterans and their families who are homeless or in
danger of homelessness, including housing, utility, employment, and legal
assistance, according to guidelines established by the commissioner. In order to avoid duplication of services,
the commissioner must ensure that this assistance will be coordinated with all
other available programs for veterans.
Journal of the House - 36th Day - Monday, April 20,
2009 - Top of Page 2837
Subd. 3. Veterans
Homes 43,411,000 42,476,000
Veterans Homes Special Revenue
Account. The general fund appropriations made to
the department may be transferred to a veterans homes special revenue account
in the special revenue fund in the same manner as other receipts are deposited
according to Minnesota Statutes, section 198.34, and are appropriated to the
department for the operation of veterans homes facilities and programs.
Repair and Betterment. Of this
appropriation, $1,435,000 in fiscal year 2010 and $500,000 in fiscal year 2011
are to be used for repair, maintenance, rehabilitation, and betterment
activities at facilities statewide.
Hastings Veterans Home. $220,000
each year is for increases in the mental health program at the Hastings Veterans
Home.
Food and
Pharmaceuticals. $600,000 each year is for
increases in food and
pharmaceutical costs at the Minnesota veterans homes. This is a onetime appropriation.
Sec. 3.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 43A.11, subdivision 7, is amended to
read:
Subd. 7. Ranking of veterans. Applicants who meet the minimum
qualifications for a vacant position and claim disabled veteran's preference
shall be listed in the applicant pool ahead of all other applicants. Applicants who meet the minimum
qualifications for a vacant position and claim nondisabled veteran's preference
shall be listed in the applicant pool after those claiming disabled veteran's
preference and ahead of nonveterans. Each
recently separated veteran who meets minimum qualifications for a vacant
position and has claimed a veterans or disabled veterans preference must be
granted an interview for the position by the hiring authority.
The term "recently separated veteran" means
a veteran, as defined in section 197.447, who has served in active military
service, at any time on or after September 11, 2001, and who has been honorably
discharged from active service, as shown by the person's form DD-214.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective July 1, 2009,
and applies to all appointments made on or after that date.
Sec. 4.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 171.06, subdivision 3, is amended to
read:
Subd. 3. Contents of application; other information. (a) An application must:
(1) state the full name, date of birth, sex, and
either (i) the residence address of the applicant, or (ii) designated address
under section 5B.05;
(2) as may be required by the commissioner, contain a
description of the applicant and any other facts pertaining to the applicant,
the applicant's driving privileges, and the applicant's ability to operate a
motor vehicle with safety;
(3) state:
(i) the applicant's Social Security number; or
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(ii) if the applicant does not have a
Social Security number and is applying for a Minnesota identification card,
instruction permit, or class D provisional or driver's license, that the applicant
certifies that the applicant does not have a Social Security number;
(4) contain a space where the
applicant may indicate a desire to make an anatomical gift according to
paragraph (b); and
(5) contain a notification to the applicant
of the availability of a living will/health care directive designation on the
license under section 171.07, subdivision 7; and
(6) contain a space where the
applicant may request a veteran designation on the license under section
171.07, subdivision 15, and the driving record under section 171.12,
subdivision 5a.
(b) If the applicant does not
indicate a desire to make an anatomical gift when the application is made, the
applicant must be offered a donor document in accordance with section 171.07,
subdivision 5. The application must
contain statements sufficient to comply with the requirements of the Darlene
Luther Revised Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, chapter 525A, so that execution of
the application or donor document will make the anatomical gift as provided in
section 171.07, subdivision 5, for those indicating a desire to make an
anatomical gift. The application must be
accompanied by information describing Minnesota laws regarding anatomical gifts
and the need for and benefits of anatomical gifts, and the legal implications
of making an anatomical gift, including the law governing revocation of
anatomical gifts. The commissioner shall
distribute a notice that must accompany all applications for and renewals of a
driver's license or Minnesota identification card. The notice must be prepared in conjunction
with a Minnesota organ procurement organization that is certified by the
federal Department of Health and Human Services and must include:
(1) a statement that provides a fair
and reasonable description of the organ donation process, the care of the donor
body after death, and the importance of informing family members of the
donation decision; and
(2) a telephone number in a certified
Minnesota organ procurement organization that may be called with respect to
questions regarding anatomical gifts.
(c) The application must be
accompanied also by information containing relevant facts relating to:
(1) the effect of alcohol on driving
ability;
(2) the effect of mixing alcohol with
drugs;
(3) the laws of Minnesota relating to
operation of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or a
controlled substance; and
(4) the levels of alcohol-related
fatalities and accidents in Minnesota and of arrests for alcohol-related
violations.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 171.07, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 15.
Veteran designation. (a) At the request of the applicant and on
payment of the required fee, the department shall issue, renew, or reissue a driver's
license or Minnesota identification card bearing the designation
"Veteran" to an applicant who is a veteran, as defined in section
197.447.
(b) At the time of the initial
application for the designation provided under this subdivision, the applicant
must have a certified copy of the veteran's discharge papers.
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(c) The commissioner of public safety
is required to issue drivers' licenses and Minnesota identification cards with
the veteran designation only after entering a new contract or in coordination
with producing a new card design with modifications made as required by law.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective August 1, 2009, and applies to drivers' licenses and Minnesota
identification cards issued as stated in paragraph (c).
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 171.12, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 5a.
Veteran designation. When an applicant for a driver's license,
instruction permit, or Minnesota identification card requests a veteran
designation under section 171.06, subdivision 3, the commissioner shall
maintain a computer record of veteran designations. The veteran designation may be removed from
the computer record only upon written notice to the department. The veteran designation is classified as
private data on individuals as defined in section 13.02, subdivision 12, except
that this information is available to the commissioner of veterans affairs for
the purpose of administering veterans benefits.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 197.455,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Application. (a) This section shall govern
preference of a veteran under the civil service laws, charter provisions,
ordinances, rules or regulations of a county, city, town, school district, or
other municipality or political subdivision of this state. Any provision in a law, charter, ordinance,
rule or regulation contrary to the applicable provisions of this section is
void to the extent of such inconsistency.
(b) Sections 197.46 to 197.48 shall not 197.481
also apply to state civil service. a veteran who is an incumbent
in a classified appointment in the state civil service and has completed the
probationary period for that position, as defined under section 43A.16. In matters of dismissal from such a position,
a qualified veteran has the irrevocable option of using the procedures
described in sections 197.46 to 197.481, or the procedures provided in the
collective bargaining agreement applicable to the person, but not both. For a qualified veteran electing to use the
procedures of sections 197.46 to 197.481, the matters governed by those
sections must not be considered grievances under a collective bargaining
agreement, and if a veteran elects to appeal the dispute through those
sections, the veteran is precluded from making an appeal under the grievance
procedure of the collective bargaining agreement.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2009, and applies to appointments to state and local
government positions of employment made on or after that date.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 197.46, is
amended to read:
197.46 VETERANS PREFERENCE ACT; REMOVAL FORBIDDEN; RIGHT OF MANDAMUS.
Any person whose rights may be in any
way prejudiced contrary to any of the provisions of this section, shall be
entitled to a writ of mandamus to remedy the wrong. No person holding a position by appointment
or employment in the several counties, cities, towns, school districts and all
other political subdivisions in the state, who is a veteran separated from the
military service under honorable conditions, shall be removed from such
position or employment except for incompetency or misconduct shown after a
hearing, upon due notice, upon stated charges, in writing.
Any veteran who has been notified of
the intent to discharge the veteran from an appointed position or employment
pursuant to this section shall be notified in writing of such intent to
discharge and of the veteran's right to request a hearing within 60 days of
receipt of the notice of intent to discharge.
The failure of a veteran to request a hearing within the provided 60-day
period shall constitute a waiver of the right to a hearing. Such failure shall also waive all other
available legal remedies for reinstatement.
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Request for a hearing concerning such
a discharge shall be made in writing and submitted by mail or personal service
to the employment office of the concerned employer or other appropriate office
or person.
In all governmental subdivisions
having an established civil service board or commission, or merit system
authority, such hearing for removal or discharge shall be held before such
civil service board or commission or merit system authority. Where no such civil service board or
commission or merit system authority exists, such hearing shall be held by a
board of three persons appointed as follows:
one by the governmental subdivision, one by the veteran, and the third by
the two so selected. In the event the
two persons so selected do not appoint the third person within ten days after
the appointment of the last of the two, then the judge of the district court of
the county wherein the proceeding is pending, or if there be more than one
judge in said county then any judge in chambers, shall have jurisdiction to
appoint, and upon application of either or both of the two so selected shall
appoint, the third person to the board and the person so appointed by the judge
with the two first selected shall constitute the board. The veteran may appeal from the decision of
the board upon the charges to the district court by causing written notice of
appeal, stating the grounds thereof, to be served upon the governmental
subdivision or officer making the charges within 15 days after notice of the
decision and by filing the original notice of appeal with proof of service
thereof in the office of the court administrator of the district court within
ten days after service thereof. Nothing
in section 197.455 or this section shall be construed to apply to the position
of private secretary, teacher, superintendent of schools, or one chief
deputy of any elected official or head of a department, or to any person
holding a strictly confidential relation to the appointing officer. The burden of establishing such relationship
shall be upon the appointing officer in all proceedings and actions relating
thereto.
All officers, boards, commissions,
and employees shall conform to, comply with, and aid in all proper ways in
carrying into effect the provisions of section 197.455 and this section
notwithstanding any laws, charter provisions, ordinances or rules to the
contrary. Any willful violation of such
sections by officers, officials, or employees is a misdemeanor.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2009.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 198.003, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 4a.
Federal funding. The commissioner is authorized to apply for
and accept federal funding for purposes of this section.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 198.003, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7.
Use of Medicare Part D for
pharmacy costs. (a) The
commissioner shall maximize the use of Medicare Part D to pay pharmacy costs
for eligible veterans residing at the veterans homes.
(b) The commissioner shall encourage
eligible veterans to participate in the Medicare Part D program and assist
veterans in obtaining Medicare Part D coverage.
(c) The commissioner shall take any
necessary steps to prevent an eligible veteran participating in Medicare Part D
from receiving fewer benefits under Medicare Part D than they would have
received under their existing Veterans Administration benefits.
Sec. 11. [198.365]
VETERANS MENTAL HEALTH FACILITY; KANDIYOHI COUNTY.
Subdivision 1.
Establishment. (a) The commissioner of veterans affairs
shall establish a 90-bed facility in Kandiyohi County to provide residential
mental health nursing services to veterans, in conformance with licensing rules
of the Department of Health and funding requirements of the United States
Department of Veterans Affairs.
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(b) Services provided by the facility
may include, but not be limited to:
(1) geriatric care for mentally ill
veterans who have severe behavior problems; and
(2) standard long-term care.
(c) To the extent practicable, the
facility shall accept referrals from veterans homes in the state.
Subd. 2.
Funding. (a) The facility must be purchased or
built with funds, 65 percent of which must be provided by the federal
government and 35 percent by other nonstate sources, including local units of
government, veterans organizations, business entities, volunteer organizations,
and any other nonstate sources deemed acceptable by the commissioner. Local contributions must include land for the
facility and grounds, and funding sufficient to cover the full state and local
contribution for the federal matching grant.
The commissioner is authorized to accept pledges and funding, including
contributions of land, from these local sources for this purpose.
(b) The commissioner shall seek
private, local, state, and federal funding for possible development of a
public-private partnership to provide services at this facility for veterans
with traumatic brain injury and with posttraumatic stress disorder, as well as
for veterans who have a dual diagnosis of mental illness and chemical
dependency.
(c) The commissioner shall seek
funding from private, local, state, and federal sources for possible
development of traumatic brain injury research at this facility.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 626.8517, is
amended to read:
626.8517 ELIGIBILITY FOR RECIPROCITY EXAMINATION BASED ON RELEVANT
MILITARY EXPERIENCE.
(a) For purposes of this section,
"relevant military experience" means five years of active duty
military police service.:
(1) five years' active service
experience in a military law enforcement occupational specialty;
(2) three years' active service
experience in a military law enforcement occupational specialty and completion
of a two-year or more degree from a regionally accredited postsecondary
education institution; or
(3) five years' cumulative experience
as a full-time peace officer in another state combined with active service
experience in a military law enforcement occupational specialty.
(b) A person who has relevant military
experience under paragraph (a) and who has been honorably discharged
from the military active service as evidenced by a form DD-214 is
eligible to take the reciprocity examination. "Active service" has
the meaning given in section 190.05, subdivision 5.
Sec. 13. Laws 2008, chapter 297, article 2, section
26, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Administrative
provisions. (a) The commissioner of
veterans affairs, or the commissioner's designee, must convene the initial
meeting of the working group. Upon
request of the working group, the commissioner must provide meeting space and
administrative services for the group.
The members of the working group must elect a chair or co-chairs from
the legislative members of the working group at the initial meeting. Each subsequent meeting is at the call of the
chair or co-chairs.
(b) Public members of the working
group serve without special compensation or special payment of expenses from
the working group.
(c) The working group expires on June
30, 2009 2010, unless an extension is authorized by law by that
date.
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Sec. 14. DATE
OPERATIONAL.
To the extent practicable, the
commissioner of veterans affairs shall design, construct, furnish, and equip
the veterans mental health facility authorized in Minnesota Statutes, section
198.365, for commencement of operations on July 1, 2013. No state general fund money may be expended
for operational costs for this facility prior to that date and without further
legislative authorization.
Sec. 15. REPORTING
REQUIRED.
(a) The commissioner of finance must
collect the following data annually from each cabinet-level state agency, with
the exception of the Metropolitan Council, and must report those data, by
agency, by the second week of each legislative session, beginning in 2011, to
the chairs and leading minority members of each of the house of representatives
and senate committees having responsibility for veterans policy and finance
issues:
(1) the total number of persons
employed in full-time positions by the state agency;
(2) the total number of employees
identified in clause (1) who are veterans;
(3) the total number of vacant
full-time positions in the agency filled by hiring or appointment during the
designated fiscal year;
(4) the total number of applications
received for the positions identified in clause (3);
(5) the total number of applications
identified in clause (4) for which veterans preference was elected by the
applicant;
(6) the total number of applications
identified in clause (5) for which the veteran applicant was judged by the
hiring authority as meeting minimum requirements for the open positions of
employment;
(7) the total number of veteran
applicants identified in clause (6) who were interviewed by the hiring
authority for the open positions of employment in the agency;
(8) the total number of veteran
applicants identified in clause (7) who were selected for and offered
employment within the open positions of employment in the agency;
(9) the total number of veteran applicants
identified in clause (8) who were hired into the open positions of employment
in the agency;
(10) the total number of veteran
applicants identified in clause (6) who were sent a rejection letter, in
accordance with Minnesota Statutes, section 43A.11, subdivision 9; and
(11) any other data or information
deemed important by the commissioner of administration and reflecting on the
efforts of the subject agency to recruit and hire veterans.
(b) The data must reflect one full
fiscal year or one full calendar year, as determined by the commissioner of
finance.
(c) The term "veteran" has
the meaning given in Minnesota Statutes, section 197.447.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2009.
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Sec. 16. ALLIED
FORCES; ESTIMATE OF ELIGIBILITY.
By January 15, 2010, the commissioner
of veterans affairs shall contact the United States Department of Defense, the
United States Department of Veterans Affairs, and other relevant federal
agencies as necessary to determine the number and identities of Minnesota
residents who, as former residents of Vietnam or Laos, significantly aided or
assisted the United States armed forces during the period of the Vietnam War,
and, to the extent possible and in observance of federal and state privacy laws
and best practices, shall locate an official federal list of those
persons. The purpose of this directive
is to provide information helpful to the legislature in weighing the
feasibility of extending state veterans' benefits to Minnesota residents who
have served as allied soldiers during the Vietnam War.
Sec. 17. INTERAGENCY
STAFF.
For fiscal years 2010 and 2011, the
Department of Veterans Affairs may not use funds appropriated in this article
directly or indirectly to pay for the services of staff in the Office of the
Governor.
ARTICLE 4
MILITARY AFFAIRS
Section 1.
MILITARY APPROPRIATIONS.
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and for the
purposes specified in this article. The
appropriations are from the general fund and are available for the fiscal years
indicated for each purpose. The figures
"2010" and "2011" used in this article mean that the
appropriations listed under them are available for the fiscal year ending June
30, 2010, or June 30, 2011, respectively. "The first year" is fiscal
year 2010. "The second year" is fiscal year 2011. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2010 and 2011.
APPROPRIATIONS
Available for the Year
Ending June 30
2010 2011
Sec. 2. MILITARY
AFFAIRS
Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation $22,374,000 $19,374,000
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd.
2. Maintenance of Training Facilities 6,660,000 6,660,000
Subd.
3. General Support 2,366,000 2,366,000
Subd.
4. Enlistment Incentives 13,348,000 10,348,000
If appropriations for either year of
the biennium are insufficient, the appropriation from the other year is
available. The appropriations for
enlistment incentives are available until expended.
Journal of the
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Sec. 3. [192.525]
POSTDEPLOYMENT HEALTH ASSESSMENTS.
The adjutant general must establish a
program of postdeployment health and wellness assessments for members of the
National Guard who have been called into active military service and deployed
outside the state. There must be a
health and wellness assessment conducted between six months and one year after
the end of a member's deployment. The
adjutant general may call on other state agencies, the United States Department
of Veterans Affairs, county veteran service officers, and other appropriate
resources in administering this program."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to
appropriations; appropriating money for agriculture, the Board of Animal
Health, Rural Finance Authority, veterans, and the military; changing certain
agricultural and animal health requirements and programs; establishing a
program; eliminating a sunset; requiring certain studies and reports; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 3.737, subdivision 1; 3.7371, subdivision 3;
13.643, by adding a subdivision; 17.03, subdivision 12; 17.115, subdivision 2;
18.75; 18.76; 18.77, subdivisions 1, 3, 5, by adding subdivisions; 18.78,
subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; 18.79; 18.80, subdivision 1; 18.81,
subdivision 3, by adding subdivisions; 18.82, subdivisions 1, 3; 18.83; 18.84,
subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 18.86; 18.87; 18.88; 18B.01, subdivision 8, by adding subdivisions;
18B.065, subdivisions 1, 2, 2a, 3, 7, by adding subdivisions; 18B.26,
subdivisions 1, 3; 18B.31, subdivisions 3, 4; 18B.37, subdivision 1; 18C.415,
subdivision 3; 18C.421; 18C.425, subdivisions 4, 6; 18E.03, subdivisions 2, 4;
18E.06; 18H.02, subdivision 12a, by adding subdivisions; 18H.07, subdivisions
2, 3; 18H.09; 18H.10; 28A.085, subdivision 1; 28A.21, subdivision 5; 31.94;
32.394, subdivision 8; 41A.09, subdivisions 2a, 3a; 41B.039, subdivision 2;
41B.04, subdivision 8; 41B.042, subdivision 4; 41B.043, subdivision 1b;
41B.045, subdivision 2; 43A.11, subdivision 7; 97A.045, subdivision 1; 171.06,
subdivision 3; 171.07, by adding a subdivision; 171.12, by adding a
subdivision; 197.455, subdivision 1; 197.46; 198.003, by adding subdivisions; 239.791,
subdivisions 1, 1a; 336.9-601; 343.11; 550.365, subdivision 2; 559.209,
subdivision 2; 582.039, subdivision 2; 583.215; 626.8517; Laws 2008, chapter
297, article 2, section 26, subdivision 3; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapters 17; 18; 18B; 31; 41A; 192; 198; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 17.49, subdivision 3; 18G.12, subdivision 5;
38.02, subdivisions 3, 4; 41.51; 41.52; 41.53; 41.55; 41.56; 41.57; 41.58,
subdivisions 1, 2; 41.59, subdivision 1; 41.60; 41.61, subdivision 1; 41.62;
41.63; 41.65; Minnesota Rules, part 1505.0820."
With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Ways
and Means.
MINORITY REPORT
April 17, 2009
I, the undersigned,
being a minority of the Committee on Finance, recommend that H. F. No. 1122 do
pass with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE
1
AGRICULTURE
Section 1.
SUMMARY OF APPROPRIATIONS.
The amounts shown in this section summarize direct
appropriations, by fund, made in this article.